(Left to right:) Emerald Fennell, Barry Keoghan and Jacob Elordi.Photo:Rodin Eckenroth/Variety via Getty; Amy Sussman/Getty; Arturo Holmes/Getty

Rodin Eckenroth/Variety via Getty; Amy Sussman/Getty; Arturo Holmes/Getty
Emerald Fennellknows — better than anyone — that her new movie is as raunchy as they come.
“What I’m saying with that scene,” Fennell, 38, tells PEOPLE, “is I think that scene is the sexiest thing I’ve ever seen in my life… And I’m saying that anyone else is safe to feel that.”
The film features plenty of other eyebrow-raising moments involving Oliver, an Oxford University student invited to the lavish estate of Felix’s family for the 2007 summer holiday. As theOscar-winningwriter-director behindPromising Young Womantells PEOPLE, the shock value of such a scene is inherent to its design.
“I’m interested in how it makes you feel. Did you feel something you’ve never felt before in a movie? And if that’s the case, then the movie is effective, and it’s worked, and that’s what we wanted to do.”
(Left to right:) Emerald Fennell, Barry Keoghan and Jacob Elordi filming “Saltburn”.Courtesy Prime

Courtesy Prime
The willingness of her leading man to lick a bathtub drain in close-up is also part of the intended effect, she adds. Upon meeting the “incredible” Keoghan to discuss the role, she remembers, “He sat down and he said, ‘I’m Oliver.’
“And I was like, ‘I know. Me too.’ Because we are. That’s the thing, Oliver’s my imaginary friend, he’s me. Then I meet Barry and suddenly Barry’s Oliver too. And then we have this thing where — and it’s the same with all the characters — you can hold hands and know. That’s what’s so exciting, is then you are always pushing each other to be more interesting, more complicated, more difficult, more sticky, more sexy, all of it, because you are in it with them.”
Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
And if some audience members aren’t “in it with them,” as Fennell says, “fine, whatever.”
“Not everyone’s going to love it,” she quips. “But for the people that do, the people that connect to it, it is such a deep connection. It’s such a profound feeling of being seen — that all of us felt making it, actually.”
Barry Keoghan in “Saltburn”.Courtesy Prime

Two audience members who had to decide whether to feel that connection, adds Fennell, were her mother and father. “Imagine sitting between your parents watching this film,” she says with a laugh, “being the person who made it.”
As she points out, “it’s not like my imagination came from nowhere… Luckily my parents are incredibly f—ing cool. But there are a few moments in the movie where I’m like, ‘Sorry, Dad!’”
Saltburnis in theaters now.
source: people.com