- Truce called after 82 killed in Pakistan sectarian clashes
- Salah wants Liverpool to pile on misery for Man City after sinking Saints
- Berrettini takes Italy to brink of Davis Cup defence
- Lille condemn Sampaoli to defeat on Rennes debut
- Leicester sack manager Steve Cooper
- Salah sends Liverpool eight points clear after Southampton scare
- Key Trump pick calls for end to escalation in Ukraine
- Tuipulotu try helps Scotland end Australia's bid for a Grand Slam
- Davis Cup organisers hit back at critics of Nadal retirement ceremony
- Noel in a 'league of his own' as he wins Gurgl slalom
- A dip or deeper decline? Guardiola seeks response to Man City slump
- Germany goes nuts for viral pistachio chocolate
- EU urges immediate halt to Israel-Hezbollah war
- Basel votes to stump up bucks to host Eurovision
- Ukraine shows fragments of new Russian missile after 'Oreshnik' strike
- Six face trial in Paris for blackmailing Paul Pogba
- Olympic champion An wins China crown in style
- It's party time for Las Vegas victor Russell on 'dream weekend'
- Norris applauds 'deserved' champion Verstappen
- Kohli blasts century as India declare against Australia
- Verstappen 'never thought' he'd win four world titles
- Former Masters champion Reed wins Hong Kong Open
- Awesome foursomes: Formula One's exclusive club of four-time world champions
- Smylie beats 'idol' Cameron Smith to win Australian PGA Championship
- Five key races in Max Verstappen's 2024 title season
- Max Verstappen: Young, gifted and single-minded four-time F1 champion
- 'Star is born': From homeless to Test hero for India's Jaiswal
- Verstappen wins fourth consecutive Formula One world title
- Survivors, sniffing dogs join anti-mine march at Cambodia's Angkor Wat
- Far right eye breakthrough in Romania presidential vote
- Jaiswal slams majestic 161 but Australia fight back in Perth
- Edinburgh's alternative tour guides show 'more real' side of city
- IPL teams set to splash the cash at 'mega-auction' in Saudi Arabia
- Olympics in India a 'dream' facing many hurdles
- Wounded Bangladesh protesters receive robotic helping hand
- Majestic Jaiswal 141 not out as India pile pain on Australia
- Giannis, Lillard lead Bucks over Hornets as Spurs beat Warriors
- Juan Mata agent slammed as 'cowardly' by angry A-League coach
- Marta inspires Orlando Pride to NWSL title
- Palestinian pottery sees revival in war-ravaged Gaza
- Main points of the $300 billion climate deal
- Robertson wants policy change for overseas-based All Blacks
- Israel retreat helps rescuers heal from October 7 attack
- Afghan women turn to entrepreneurship under Taliban
- Mounting economic costs of India's killer smog
- At climate talks, painstaking diplomacy and then anger
- Uruguayans head to polls with left hoping for comeback
- Trump's mass deportation plan could end up hurting economic growth
- Iran director in exile says 'bittersweet' to rep Germany at Oscars
- US consumers to bargain hunt in annual 'Black Friday' spree
Friendship trumps death in Almodovar's English-language feature at Venice
Spain's Pedro Almodovar has a problem wrapping his head around death.
In his latest film, "The Room Next Door", the prolific 74-year-old director -- whose films have become steadily more melancholy in recent years -- celebrates the strong friendship of two women as one of them is preparing to die.
"I cannot understand with my mind that something that is alive has to die," Almodovar said ahead of the film's world premiere at the Venice Film Festival, where it is one of 21 movies competing for the Golden Lion prize.
"In that sense I am really, really like a child, very immature, because death is everywhere -- we have wars, just to see on the news, it's everywhere," he told a press conference.
The director's first full-length English-language feature sees regular Almodovar collaborator Tilda Swinton as a war correspondent suffering from terminal cancer, and Julianne Moore as her friend, a successful novelist who agrees to be at her side when she takes her own life.
"This is a film in favour of euthanasia," he stated.
Despite the heavy subject matter, Almodovar suggested that his focus on close, personal bonds served as an antidote to the divisive rhetoric prevalent in society today.
"Ultimately it's the response to hate speech that we are hearing, every day. This movie is exactly the opposite of that speech," said the "Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown" director.
He also called "profoundly stupid" a proposal by far-right politicians in Spain to intercept arriving migrants with Navy ships, saying that "I want to send a message... to all those unaccompanied children who are fighting to reach our borders."
And he denounced "denialist speech" about climate change: "What I propose is the opposite. The film tells of a woman who is dying in a world that is probably also dying."
"We are in danger, the planet is in danger," he warned.
For more than a decade, Almodovar has been embracing a more poignant tone in his work, steering away from the transgressive, over-the-top black comedies of his early days towards films that consider the fear of death or physical decline.
His "Pain and Glory" from 2019 featured Antonio Banderas playing an ailing director that the filmmaker has acknowledged was modelled on himself.
But for Swinton, who interprets the dying Martha, the actors and director "talked a lot about life, we didn't really talk much about death at all".
She told journalists the film celebrates self-determination, "Somebody who decides absolutely to take her life and her living and her dying into her own hands and make it how she wants it to be, as far as she can."
"It's about a triumph, this film."
- Female friendship -
For Moore, one of the film's most compelling elements was the deep relationship between the two protagonists.
"We very, very rarely see a story about female friendship, especially female friends who are older," Moore said.
"The fact that he chose to portray this relationship, to elevate it, to show it as the love story it is I think is truly extraordinary."
"The Room Next Door" is not Almodovar's first foray into English-language filmmaking. His first, the short-format "The Human Voice", premiered at Venice in 2020, featuring Swinton as an abandoned lover.
At Cannes last year, the director presented another short, "Strange Way of Life", a gay Western starring Ethan Hawke and Pedro Pascal.
Working in English for a full-length feature posed little problem, said Almodovar, who acknowledged he had initially been wary.
"I was very happy because I thought I would have more problems," he said, giving credit to his two actresses.
"Basically they understood exactly the tone that I wanted to tell the story," he said, calling it "austere, emotional, but not melodramatic at all".
Almodovar is a regular at Venice, and accepted a career achievement Golden Lion award in 2019.
His last appearance on the Lido was in 2021, when his "Parallel Mothers", about two women who give birth the same day, won a best actress award for Penelope Cruz.
F.Moura--PC