Even as someone living in a country where consensual assisted dying is legal, I only ever hear about it through the contentiousness around the issue. And there is valid reason for protest and scepticism, especially around its relationship to healthcare resources, but the principle shouldn’t be so controversial. And Pedro Almodóvar’s The Room Next Door even dares to suggest it could be profoundly liberating, and strengthen the bond between the living and the dead. A novel, perhaps healthy approach to that most difficult of subjects. The Room Next Door is Almodóvar’s first English-language feature, though he’s made a couple English short films in the last few years. The source is an American novel, What Are You Going Through by Sigrid Nunez, but I have to imagine the real reason Almodóvar made the film in English was to utilize Tilda Swinton, who starred in his 2020 short The Human Voice , and who was very much an ideal match for this character. Her Martha Hunt is an ex...
There is a bleak irony over pretty much everything in The Act of Killing director Joshua Oppenheimer’s narrative feature debut, The End . And perhaps that should go without saying given its title. But this is a movie that opens on a pretty, lilting song initiated by George MacKay that sounds like something out of Sondheim, its lyrics professing affirmations of contentment and hope in dark times, some poignancy for what is lost, and it is being sung by a family holed up in a bunker two decades after an apocalypse. That there can be sentiments like that expressed in a way so buoyantly is absurd given the context, and even more absurd the more we learn about this family. The joke is a very good one, and yet there’s not much laughing to be had in The End . It is indeed a movie set at The End, in the aftermath of a global climate catastrophe. How many survivors are left from it is unclear, but one wealthy family has managed to sequester themselves in an enormous and highly elabora...