Tag Archive: Tilda Swinton


On February 13th, Tilda Swinton was awarded an Honorary Golden Bear for her lifetime achievement at the 75th Berlin International Film Festival.   Her brilliant Acceptance Speech should be watched repeatedly and shared widely.

The timeliness of her impassioned plea for humanity is evidenced by the fact it came the day before JD Vance’s tirade spreading hate and scapegoating immigrants  at the Munich Security Conference .  As Tilda said: “it has perhaps never been more pressing to consider to weigh with reverence and maturity what sovereignty means to humans.”

She cleverly avoided naming the latest mob of enemies to freedom and human rights. Any caring person should know who they are.  Her speech is also rooted in a firm belief that “Cinema can inspire a civilized world”.

There is always more than one side to a story. As Tilda points out, movies are great at showing this. She doesn’t give examples but  Akira Kurosawa’s  Rashômon (1950)  sets the benchmark here. It is also demonstrated in the more recent Japanese movie Monster (2023)  directed  by Hirokazu Koreeda where we see the same dramatic events from the perspective of worried mother, a teacher and a young boy.

Without patiently and compassionately considering all points of view there is a very real danger that the world’s agenda is set by blinkered extremists as if no other possibilities exist.   

To imagine no country and a brotherhood of man may be idealistic but  hope must lie in the dream that such a Lennon-esque  vision will endure long after “greed addicted governments”  and “planet wreckers” are confined to history. Tilda imagines “a borderless realm and with no policy of exclusion persecution or deportation” and why ever not?

Isn’t being human meant to help those in dire need rather than create more barriers to liberty?  

THE LAST OF ENGLAND directed by Derek Jarman (UK, 1988

                           

“It’s a love story with England. It’s not an attack. It’s an attack on those things that I believe personally are things without value.” Derek Jarman in an interview with Chris Lippard

Derek Jarman was a war child; conceived during the period of the London blitz and born on January 31st 1942. It is perhaps no surprise to find that the spectre of WWII dominates his imagination and helped inspire his surreal poetic documentary ‘The Last of England’ made in the Spring of 1987.  

Jarman was in his mid-40s when he completed the film which graphically depicts a post-war and post-apocalyptic urban wasteland.  While making it he was diagnosed as HIV positive. This illness was for him another battle which he waged publicly. He announced his diagnosis to the world rather than be shamed into silence. The full-blown AIDS virus would end his life prematurely six years later.

The contagion may have partly accounted for his rage but it was in him anyway. “Where’s hope? Have they killed it” are rhetorical questions asked in a movie. “Yes” comes the blunt reply. “And tomorrow?” the unseen speaker asks. The answer comes in the form of a quote from graffiti Jarman had seen scrawled on a wall in London’s Euston Road: “Tomorrow is cancelled due to lack of interest”.

This brief exchange is practically the only dialogue in a movie that evolved through improvisation; there was no screenplay. Aside from Jarman’s freeform poems (read by Nigel Terry) , most of the movie plays out without words. The director’s obscure diatribes offer few clues about his intentions.  They are more full of attitude than meaning. The critic David L.Hirst called the end result  “an apocalyptic roar of a movie.”

Continue reading

The magical mystery of Memoria

MEMORIA directed by Apichatpong Weerasethakul (Colombia/Thailand, 2021)

You don’t watch this movie for the story but for the experience. There is very little action and the slimmest of plots. Tilda Swinton describes her character, Jessica, as a ghost presence and the film as “a portrait of a woman in a predicament”.

A sound she hears causes insomnia and she strives to identify its cause and significance. She visits a sound engineer and tells him “It’s like a rumble from the core of the earth and then it shrinks.”

Ironically, despite being centred on the elusive quality of  this mysterious noise, the movie is more concerned with the nature of stillness and silence. Other themes are excavation, preservation and inspiration. These all serve to provide constant reminders of time passing and the fading shadows of life.

Swinton brings a dignity and humanity to what might otherwise have become a pretentious exercise in existential navel gazing.  She is on the same wavelength as Weerasethakul in being unconcerned with creating drama or giving answers to big questions. 

The grandiose focus is on the mystery of being and finding connections, past or present, that give life a purpose. For over two hours, viewers are required to enter an audio-visual dream state conjured up by this immersive and magical movie.

HAIL CAESAR! directed by Joel & Ethan Coen (USA,2016)

large_large_ux5y8qjkszufab5vsaqxhndmyt3Friends, Romans,countrymen, lend me your ears. I come to bury Hail Caesar!, not to praise it.

We all love the Coen Brothers, and not without cause, yet I am sad to report that this is one mess of a movie.

It’s as if the siblings decided to do a cut and paste job based on ideas left over from earlier films, then phoned round all their favorite actors to see who was available for a two hour love in.

There are some clever and amusing scenes but none of them lead anywhere because there is no coherent storyline to tie them together.

Along with the equally dire Burn After Reading from 2008, it is plain that what we have here is an ensemble cast that had more fun making a movie than the audience have watching it. Continue reading

TWILIGHT FOR GROWN-UPS

ONLY LOVERS LEFT ALIVE directed by Jim Jarmusch (UK / Germany, 2013)

The future's so dark you have to wear shades.

The future’s so dark you have to wear shades.

Adam and Eve (Tom Hiddleson & Tilda Swinton) must be the coolest vampires ever to haunt the big screen.

They look so perfect together – an Emo Goth and an ice maiden, black on white.

A still of them lying naked together is so faultless it looks suspiciously like it’s been photo-shopped but who cares?

As an ageless undead couple they are  resigned to living by night; wearing shades to protect their eyes from the glare of moonlight. Continue reading