ANORGASMIA (all the things we do to survive) – Electronic Press Kit

ANORGASMIA (a.k.a. All The Things We Do To Survive) a film by Jon Einarsson Gustafsson

ARTIO FILMS in association with GREAT CANADIAN FILM FACTORY and BFILM present
MATHILDE WARNIER EDWARD HAYTER GUDMUNDUR INGI THORVALDSSON GUNNAR JONSSON in a film by JON EINARSSON GUSTAFSSON
written by JON EINARSSON GUSTAFSSON and KAROLINA LEWICKA director of photography GRAEME DUNN
edited by CHAD TREMBLAY and EVZENIE BRABCOVA costume design by ELIN REYNISDOTTIR  music by MICHAEL BROOK
produced by KAROLINA LEWICKA JON EINARSSON GUSTAFSSON JAKUB RÁLEK
executive producers STURLA GUNNARSSON and GUDMUNDUR INGI ÞORVALDSSON
produced with the support of CZECH FILM FUND TELEFILM CANADA ICELANDIC FILM FUND

Anorgasmia in Bremen
Anorgasmia in competition at Reykjavik International Film Festival
Best Actress Mathilde Warnier for Anorgasmia
Best Director - Jon Einarsson Gustafsson - Anorgasmia - BIFF Mumbai

Synopsis

After a failed attempt at a hostel luggage room hook up, Sam and Naomi think they will never see each other again. When a volcano erupts, grounding all flights, they suddenly find themselves stranded – together. 
In a stolen car, the pair embark on a quest to capture the first images of the eruption. The ensuing road trip into the Icelandic highlands uncovers their vulnerabilities as they navigate their fears of commitment, the weight of their secrets and the thrills of connection in a world where they can no longer swipe left.

Info

Original title: ANORGASMIA (aka. All The Things We Do To Survive)

Running time: 92 minutes
Format: Colour, 2.39:1, 4K, 2K DCP
Countries: Iceland, Canada, Czech Republic
Funded by: Icelandic Film Centre, Telefilm Canada, Czech Film Centre
Companies: Artio Films, Great Canadian Film Factory, BFilm.cz

Inquires
For all inquires please contact:

Karolina Lewicka
Producer
+354 840 2220
artio@artiofilms.com

Trailer 1

Stills

Mathilde Warnier in ANORGASMIA
Anorgasmia, a film by Jon Einarsson Gustafsson
Mathilde Warnier and Edward Hayter in Anorgasmia, a film by Jon Einarsson Gustafsson
Gunnar Jonsson and Mathilde Warnier in Anorgasmia, a film by Jon Einarsson Gustafsson
Actress Mathilde Warnier in Anorgasmia, a film by Jon Einarsson Gustafsson
Edward Hayter in Anorgasmia
Edward Hayter in Anorgasmia, a film by Jon Einarsson Gustafsson
Mathilde Warnier and Edward Hayter in Anorgasmia, All The Things We Do To Survive
Edward Hayter in Anorgasmia, All The Things We Do To Survive

Trailer 2

Sample scene 1

Actors

Mathilde Warnier is a French actress, model and columnist. She is best known for her roles in the Netflix-BBC series The Serpent, the films Summit Fever, Curiosa and the Amazon Prime Original The Widow TV Series. Also The New Look, Apple TV, WORLD ON FIRE, BBC, DYNASTY, Netflix, ENGRENAGES, Canal+, A VERY SECRET SERVICE, Netflix, CURIOSA, THE WILD BOYS, ETERNITY, CAPRICE and THE GRAD JOB.

Social media: https://www.instagram.com/warniermathilde

Edward Hayter, a London native, studied History and Philosophy at Sussex University before training at The Poor School and the Stella Adler Conservatory. He portrayed Thomas Walsingham in Warner Bros’ Will, a drama about a young Shakespeare, directed by Shekhar Kapur (Elizabeth, The Four Feathers) and written by Craig Pearce (Romeo + Juliet, Elvis). In 2019, he starred in the Old Vic production of Touching the Void, the best-selling account of a climbing disaster, playing Simon Yates, written by David Greig (Charlie and the Chocolate Factory) and directed by Tom Morris (War Horse).

Social media: https://www.instagram.com/edhayter

Gudmundur Ingi Thorvaldsson is an Icelandic actor, writer and producer, known for Bloodaxe 2005, Mary (2024), Assassin’s Creed: Valhalla (2020) and All Eyes on Me (2024). Gudmundur is also a musician and has released albums with his band Tvö dónaleg haust.

Gunnar Jónsson is an Icelandic actor, best known for Virgin Mountain (2015)The Valhalla Murders (2019) and Bjarnfreðarson (2009).

Composer

Michael Brook composer for Anorgasmia, a film by Jon Einarsson Gustafsson

Michael Brook was born in Toronto, Canada. He is a composer and actor, known for Sean Penn’s Into The Wild, The Fighter (with Mark Wahlberg), The Perks of Being a Wallflower (with Emma Watson) and Brooklyn (with Saoirse Ronan). He is also the inventor of the infinite guitar. Most of his music can be found here https://www.michaelbrookmusic.com

Director of Photogrphy

Graeme Dunn on the set of Anorgasmia

Graeme Dunn gained his degree in film, specialising in Cinematography, in Manchester. After leaving film school he has worked in the industry for over 20 years. Starting as a clapper loader and working his way up through the camera department, working on all kinds of jobs including, Commercials, Feature Films, TV Drama and Music videos. He served as Camera Operator for Director Shona Auerbach on her award winning debut Feature Film, Dear Frankie, and has subsequently been her Cinematographer ever since, shooting Commercials, and has just shot her next feature, Rudy, in the last year.

Official website: https://graemedunn.com

Director – Writer – Producer

Jon Einarsson Gustafsson director of Anorgasmia

Jon Einarsson Gustafsson is an Icelandic-Canadian filmmaker, theater director and photographer. He studied filmmaking at Manchester Metropolitan University and directing for stage and film at California Institute of the Arts. His films, including Wrath of Gods (with Gerard Butler) and Shadowtown (with John Rhys-Davies) have been shown at film festivals in numerous countries and have won awards.

Social media: https://www.instagram.com/joneinarssongustafsson
Official website:  https://www.jongustafsson.com

Producers

Karolina Lewicka lead producer of Anorgasmia

Karolina Lewicka is a producer and owner of Artio Films. She has produced feature films and documentaries in Iceland and Canada for Great Canadian Film Factory and Artio Films with the support and participation of the Icelandic Film Fund, Telefilm Canada, RÚV, CBC and others.

Company website: https://www.artiofilms.com
Official website: https://www.karolinalewicka.com

Jakub Ralek producer of Anorgasmia

Jakub Rálek is graduate of film and TV production at both DAMU (theatre) and FAMU (TV and film) production at Academy of Performing Arts in Prague. In addition to a number of school films, including the award-winning animated films The Kite (dir. M. Smatana) and SH_T HAPPENS (screened at Venice Biennale and Sundance, Palm Springs etc., by D. Štumpf, M. Mihalyiová), which were co-produced with BFILM s.r.o..

Company website: https://www.bfilm.cz

DIRECTOR’S NOTES

ANORGASMIA (All The Things We Do To Survive) was born from a simple question that has haunted me for a long time: What happens when two strangers can no longer escape themselves – or each other?

We live in an era where it is easy to disappear. We can travel anywhere, break ties with a single tap on a screen and start again somewhere else. In this film, I wanted to remove that possibility. To put two people in a situation where the world suddenly closes in around them and all that remains is the conversation, the silence and the truth they have tried to avoid.
The idea came when I thought of Iceland as both a real and emotional setting for the story. The volcanic eruption in the film is not just a natural disaster – it is also a mirror of the characters’ inner states. As the earth opens up and the lava erupts, Sam and Naomi’s defenses also begin to crumble. In that moment, they must confront questions that many of us avoid: Why do we connect with others? Why are we afraid of intimacy? And what are we willing to do to survive – emotionally?

The film was also an attempt to capture a certain truth about modern relationships. We are constantly searching, constantly evaluating possibilities, but rarely stopping. By following two people on a journey through the raw and unpredictable landscape of Iceland, I wanted to create a space where they – and the viewer – can no longer look away.
Ultimately, this is a story about vulnerability. About how sometimes it takes the end of the world, or at least a volcanic eruption, to force us to say what we would never have dared to say otherwise.

In 2010, the eruption of Eyjafjallajökull shut down air traffic throughout Europe. By a twist of fate, my helicopter pilot friend and I were the first people to see the eruption with our naked eyes. For the first few days I was the only photographer allowed to fly over the volcano and my images were used by almost every single media outlet in the western world.

Millions of people were stranded in airports all over the world. Some were waiting to travel, others eager to get home. Everyone had places to be, but that volcano forced a change. In the years since, I have met many people whose lives were impacted by the eruption, some of them making a pilgrimage to the Eyjafjallajökull volcano. Their stories inspired me to make this unusual event the backdrop of Anorgasmia.

Anorgasmia refers to the inability to reach satisfaction. Our main characters, Sam and Naomi, belong to a generation that seems to have a harder time with commitment than any generation before. They entered the world of dating after dating apps were invented. They reduced rejection to a swipe. They have less sex, “quiet quit” their jobs, and prefer FaceTime to facetime. They are the generation that invented ghosting. I wanted to understand them and come to terms with them. Instead of examining them through a lens of judgement, I decided to put Sam and Naomi in a place where they no longer have access to an anxiety-inducing over-abundance of choice, where they can not run away from each other, where they have to face each other and eventually face themselves. That place is the treacherous highlands of Iceland.

I grew up in Iceland but spent many years abroad, first studying in England and California, and later working in Canada. After sixteen years away, I was invited back to Iceland to act in a large-scale Viking film, Beowulf and Grendel, starring Gerard Butler and Stellan Skarsgård. I played one of Beowulf’s ten warriors, which meant spending forty days in Viking armor and several months living in the Icelandic highlands.

That experience was transformative. Coming straight from Toronto into the rugged isolation of Iceland’s mountains, I rediscovered the landscape of my homeland. As a child, I’d taken it for granted; I had never explored the highlands or the remote natural wonders that tourists travel across the world to see. But during that production, I fell deeply in love with Iceland again. When I returned to Canada, I found myself homesick for its raw, untamed beauty, and before long, I decided to come back.

Shortly after returning, a major volcanic eruption occurred under the glacier Eyjafjallajökull. The event halted air travel across much of the Northern Hemisphere, grounding millions. By coincidence, I found myself at the center of it all. A helicopter company invited me to join a flight over the volcano with a camera, and we became the first to witness and document the eruption from above. Through a break in the clouds, we saw what no one else had yet seen — the fire and ash bursting through the glacier’s icy shell.

The footage I captured became some of the first images of the event seen worldwide, even the White House, under President Obama, used them. For four extraordinary days, my photographs and video footage dominated global news. It was a surreal time, but it also changed my perspective. During the chaos, as millions of travelers were stranded, lives were quietly being rewritten — people met unexpectedly, relationships began or ended, and choices were made that altered personal trajectories.

In the aftermath, I stayed connected with the helicopter pilots. They often invited me to join flights with tourists who wanted to visit the volcano, sometimes to propose, sometimes to marry, sometimes simply to return to the place where their lives had changed. These encounters fascinated me. They revealed a generation struggling with commitment, with the ability to truly stay present and connected.

That theme became the seed of Anorgasmia. I wanted to explore what happens when two people from this generation, the same one that invented ghosting and quiet quitting, and learned to date through apps, are forced to confront each other without escape. So I placed them in the Icelandic highlands, where you can’t just walk away. Out there, nature itself demands cooperation and connection; a storm or a broken car can become a matter of survival.

The story grew from my reflections on modern relationships and emotional isolation. It’s not exactly a love story — more a meditation on closeness and the difficulty of genuine intimacy. In today’s world, we’re constantly polarized and encouraged to separate politically, emotionally, spiritually. Anorgasmia is my small, personal attempt to reverse that trend, to push two people closer together and see what happens when barriers fall away.

The film also speaks to that fleeting, magical moment when someone enters your life briefly but profoundly changes it. When we meet a stranger we may never see again, we sometimes reveal our truest selves, the secrets and vulnerabilities we’d never share with those we see every day. That moment of raw connection is at the heart of the film.

Stylistically, I was inspired by filmmakers like Richard Linklater, particularly his Before Sunrise trilogy,  by the intimacy of low-budget, high-heart cinema. Early in my career, I volunteered at the Sundance Film Festival and met Robert Rodriguez, who had just premiered El Mariachi. His approach of making a powerful film with minimal resources and maximal passion left a lasting impression. I always knew I wanted to create something with that same spirit.

When we shot Anorgasmia, we worked with a tiny crew, just myself, a cinematographer, a sound recordist, and one assistant. We stayed together on a friend’s remote farm on Iceland’s south coast, cooking together at night and shooting during the day. That closeness mirrored the intimacy of the story we were telling. The freedom of such a small production allowed us to adapt to Iceland’s unpredictable weather and to capture something real, both visually and emotionally.

My two leads, Edward Hayter from London and Mathilde Warnier from Paris, brought the story to life beautifully. Through their eyes, I rediscovered Iceland once again — its vastness, fragility and strange poetry.

For the score, I was fortunate to work with the legendary composer Michael Brook, whose work on Into the Wild, Brooklyn, and The Fighter I’ve long admired. After seeing an early cut of the film, he immediately connected with it and agreed to compose the music. His score became the emotional glue of the film, the final, missing voice that turned the story into a complete poem.

Ultimately, Anorgasmia (All the Things We Do to Survive) is not about sex or even romance. It’s about commitment and the struggle for connection in a generation both liberated and trapped by its freedom. It’s about the courage it takes to stay, to commit, and to face oneself, especially when the world makes it so easy to run.

I hope the film speaks to that part of all of us that still longs for closeness, even when we fear it most.

 

Anorgasmia, a film by Jon Einarsson Gustafsson