Indeed, when you watch the extended cut (available on the recent Criterion release), there is a moment after the cut where Ramon almost smiles. He touches his own lips. It suggests the kiss wasn't a climax, but a question. We reached out to actor Steven Plemons (now 45, star of the hit series The North Water ). Surprisingly, he was eager to talk about the scene that once haunted his resume. Q: You’ve joked in the past that the ‘Ramon kiss’ was the most embarrassing moment of your career. Has that changed?
By asking for “more,” the fandom isn’t demanding a sex scene or a dramatic confession. They are demanding duration. They want permission to sit in the awkwardness, to see two people figure out what they mean to each other without a punchline or a fade to black. Kissing Ramon Some More is not a real sequel. There are no production deals, no casting calls. But it exists in the best possible place: the collective imagination. Kissing Ramon Some More
The first kiss happens in the rain. It is clumsy, desperate, and lasts exactly four seconds. Critics panned it as “performative” and “physically uncomfortable.” Roger Ebert famously wrote that the kiss “had all the passion of two mannequins colliding in a windstorm.” Indeed, when you watch the extended cut (available
“Absolutely. I used to wince seeing it. But my daughter found the ‘Kissing Ramon Some More’ edits last year. She said, ‘Dad, this is so vulnerable.’ That hit me. I was trying to act passionate . But the director kept yelling, ‘Be worse at it. Be a real human.’ So I stopped acting. I just... kissed a guy I had a crush on in the dailies.” We reached out to actor Steven Plemons (now
It may not be the most elegant kiss in cinema. But it might be the most honest. And honestly, we could all use some more of that.