Society's expectations of women, including sexual and reproductive expectations, are addressed throughout the film. Plot points include the assumption that all women want to bear children, marital dissatisfaction, infidelity, a need to not appear pregnant at one's wedding, and more.
A woman has apparently had sex in a car with a man: she wipes her vulva (not seen) with a tissue and pulls up her panties.
Two women kiss and then are shown asleep in bed together. As one gets up, brief, dark glimpses of breasts, butt, and pubic hair are visible.
Breasts are visible while a woman in a shower does a self-examination for lumps.
Four performance artists, men and women, are intertwined and nude on stage, but breasts and genitals are blocked from view or in shadow too deep to be visible.
At a very long distance, a woman's breast is visible as she prepares to feed a baby. And breasts are seen in a diagram on a book cover. Burlesque performers wear skimpy costumes, and men's chests are visible.
A gay man says he married to appear straight. In a separate scene, a convincing drag performer is seen in a bra, and then (clothed) singing on stage.
A character is concerned she might be pregnant.