'This film is all about living': Tilda Swinton says The Room Next Door isn't about death

'The Room Next Door' actress Tilda Swinton has insisted the show isn't actually "about death at all", despite focusing on a terminal cancer patient.

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Tilda Swinton has insisted ‘The Room Next Door’ is “not really about death at all”.

The 64-year-old actress stars in Pedro Almodovar’s new movie as Martha, a terminal cancer patient who wants to end her life on her own terms but she argued the film is more “nourishing” than depressing, despite the bleak subject matter.

She told Britain’s HELLO! Magazine: “I hope people will find it both surprising and nourishing.

“It’s about momentous things, possibly the most momentous thing of all, which is, how do we approach our end of live?

“But it’s done with such simplicity and lack of drama. That’s what one hopes for – to be very graceful about how we live at the end of our life.

“It’s not really about death at all. There’s very little interesting one can say about death. It’s much, much less interesting than living. And this film is all about living.”

Having spent time with terminally ill friends in their final days, Tilda found a “sense of catharsis” in making the movie, which also stars Julianne Moore as Martha’s pal Ingrid.

She said: “This film, for me, is incredibly personal business and a real blessing of a very profound nature.

“I made no secret of the fact that I’ve had the privilege over the last few years to be in what I call the ‘Ingrid position’ quite a lot, and I’ve been so honoured to accompany several Marthas on their way.

“So to put myself in that Martha position meant that I could put my own experience into the film.

“It gave me the opportunity to put myself in the shoes that I’ve been sitting beside for quite a long period of my life and I’m regularly sitting beside people in those shoes and learning from them.

“And so what I feel now is a sense of catharsis to actually translate that personal experience into a work of art.”