T4K3.news
Brie and Franco discuss Together
Brie and Franco promote Together, discuss their marriage, and address a copyright lawsuit as they push a bold horror project.

Alison Brie and Dave Franco discuss their horror film Together, their work as a couple, and the challenges of sharing private life in promotion.
Brie and Franco push boundaries in Together
Brie and Franco are in London to promote Together, a body horror film about a couple whose bond fuses their bodies after a night in a mysterious cave. The pair trace their 13-year romance and eight-year marriage, explaining how their shared love of horror feeds the project. The film leans into gore to explore a tense relationship and includes scenes that push comfort zones, with the actors noting they tested the material without an intimacy coordinator as they push physical limits on screen.
The interview also covers the pressures of publicity. Brie says they are usually private about their relationship, but the project brought them into a more public fold. A copyright infringement lawsuit filed by another writer over the film’s premise is acknowledged, with the team insisting the claims are without merit. Despite the legal cloud, Brie and Franco frame Together as a natural extension of their DIY, collaborative approach to making and promoting indie cinema.
Key Takeaways
"We don’t generally advertise our relationship."
Brie on privacy during promotion
"Press is not something that comes naturally to me."
Franco on media engagement
"Divulging so much personal info lately, it’s been a little scary for me."
Franco on publicity
"We’ve unwrapped these other artistic parts of each other by being together."
Brie on collaboration as a couple
Brie and Franco’s dialogue reflects a growing trend: real life partners turning their relationship into a creative asset. Horror becomes a platform to test trust, vulnerability and the boundaries between private life and public storytelling. For audiences, the couple’s openness can feel authentic when the project itself carries a genuine personal stake.
The choices around safety on set, such as for nude scenes, and whether to employ an intimacy coordinator, highlight a broader debate in cinema about protecting performers while pursuing bold, risk-taking art. The legal challenge adds a separate layer of risk that could influence reception and future collaborations, even as the couple leans into a joint producer-actor identity that blurs the line between personal brand and artistic output.
Highlights
- We don’t generally advertise our relationship.
- Press is not something that comes naturally to me.
- Divulging so much personal info lately, it’s been a little scary for me.
- We’ve unwrapped these other artistic parts of each other by being together.
Legal risk from copyright dispute around Together
A filmmaker has filed a copyright infringement lawsuit alleging that elements of Together borrow from his script. The producers say the claims are frivolous and will be shown to be unfounded in court.
The film offers a window into how artists turn intimate life into a storytelling instrument without losing sight of craft.
Enjoyed this? Let your friends know!
Related News

Filmmaker Discusses Sex Scene in Together

Alison Brie and Dave Franco release new horror film Together

Together reveals the dark side of love

Together Opens July 30 Featuring Body Horror and Psychological Depth

Together critiques romantic ideals in relationships

Superman surpasses $300 million at U.S. box office

New movie releases this weekend

Fantastic Four Maintains Lead as New Films Launch
