Tilda Swinton explores assisted suicide in Pedro Almodovar’s 'The Room
Next Door'
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[October 07, 2024]
By JOHN CARUCCI
TORONTO (AP) — Although “The Room Next Door” is Pedro Almodóvar’s first
English-language feature, Tilda Swinton notes that he’s never written in
a language that anyone else truly speaks.
“He writes in Pedro language, and here he is making another film in
another version of Pedro language, which just happens to sound a little
bit like English,” Swinton said.
Set in New York, Swinton stars as Martha, a terminally ill woman who
chooses to end her life on her own terms. After reconnecting with her
friend Ingrid, played by Julianne Moore, Martha persuades her to stay
and keep her company before she goes through with her decision.
Beyond the film’s narrative, Swinton said she believes individuals
should have a say in their own living and dying. She acknowledges that
she has personally witnessed a friend’s compassionate departure.
“In my own life I had the great good fortune to be asked by someone in
Martha’s position to be his Ingrid (Julianne Moore),” Swinton said.
She said that experience shaped her attitude about life and death: “Not
only my capacity to be witness to other people in that situation, but my
own living and my own dying.”
Swinton spoke to The Associated Press about “The Room Next Door,”
Almodóvar and he idea of letting people die on their own terms. Remarks
have been edited for clarity and brevity.
AP: Tackling that role, what was the challenge to get into the
character?
SWINTON: I felt really blessed by the opportunity. So many of us have
been in the situation Julianne Moore’s character finds herself in, being
asked to be the witness of someone who is dying. Whether that wanting to
orchestrate their own dismount or not, to be in that position to be a
witness is something that I’ve been privileged to experience many times
in my life since I was quite young.
AP: Many people experience watching terminally ill family members,
can this film help them?
SWINTON: It’s a really beautiful poem to a possibility of an attitude. I
think (my character) Martha’s attitude to her own living is really
inspiring. I would like to think that this is a really generous proposal
and that it might inspire people to just know that it’s possible to face
their own death with dignity, which is really what we’re talking about.
It really is a fool’s errand to think we can avoid thinking about death
because it’s not just unlucky people who get ill or who die. It’s an
inevitability. And so we might as well, you know, embrace it. And by the
way, the more we embrace it, I would suggest the more we will enjoy our
living.
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AP: Your character goes to great
extents to alleviate the criminality. Do you think that also shows
that that perhaps that there is a place in a society for assisted
suicide?
SWINTON: There are many countries in the world where it is not
criminal to assist somebody’s active will to orchestrate their own
dying. And in the United States, there are 10 states where it is not
criminal, where it’s possible for two doctors to assist in the
active will of a patient to take charge of their own dying. And it’s
there are just other places where and New York State, which is where
our film is set, is not one of those 10 states. And there are all
sorts of people, very wise and very compassionate people, very
educated and very enlightened people, in my view, who are actively
campaigning to broaden this acceptance.
AP: You’ve worked with lots of great directors in your career,
what was the adjustment to working with Pedro?
SWINTON: I’d had a taste of it with short film, “The Human Voice.”
We made it in the middle of COVID. We shot it in nine days. Super,
super fast… And I thought that Pedro was working very fast because
it was a short film and because we were in the middle of COVID. No,
no, that is the way Pedro works. I now discover super, super fast
two takes, if you’re lucky.
AP: Does his style put your performance on an organic path?
SWINTON: I mean, it really helps always when you know the work of a
filmmaker as well as it’s possible to know Pedro’s work. I’ve known
it since I was a student, and I’ve loved it always. It’s like a
country. I love to go to the world of Almodóvar and it’s not Spain,
it’s somewhere else. It’s his environment. So, stepping into the
frame of a filmmaker who creates that environment is always a bit of
a trip.
AP: At Venice, the film resonated with audiences with a very long
standing ovation. How validating was that?
SWINTON: It’s still a bit of a shock to us. When you’re in an
audience, that’s the first indication of whether the souffle has
risen or not. Apparently 18-and-a-half minutes is a record when
you’re standing next to Pedro Almodóvar and you know that that is
18-and-a-half minutes of people really lovingly appreciating him. It
pretty much doesn’t get much better than that.
AP: Is awards season something that you look at when you’re doing
a film like this? When you hear the buzz, is that something that’s
ever on your mind?
SWINTON: Not mine. To be honest, I’m ignorant really, of that in
particular. I have other things on my mind. That’s like the weather.
It’s like saying, do you have the weather in three months on your
mind? Well, no. Let’s wait and see. Let’s keep it real. Let’s keep
it today.
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