Flashbacks reveal Swinton's reporting on a naggingly unspecified conflict; the exteriors are so visually generic, in the main, that they may as well be Vancouver passing for New York. There's the odd foray into Edward Hopper pastiche, one of a series of nods to American artists (Faulkner, Hemingway, Buster Keaton, John Huston) which indicate the director is being canny indeed about currying the favour of new executives, audiences and awards voters, but it's a curious thing to see Almodóvar aspiring to the art of others, rather than finding (and then redecorating) a room of his own. The best Almodóvars (you'll have your own favourites; this filmography is now rich enough to allow everyone else theirs) expand in every direction as far as the eye can see; every character gets instilled with complex, turbulent life, and every line assumes two or more meanings. Room can seem poky and tinny by comparison: two women operating in a self-engineered bubble, corresponding to two actors working their butts off on a tightly guarded set. The Human Voice felt more expansive in its gestures and repercussions, and that was shot when social distancing was a thing. The new film retains lovely, absorbing, properly Almodóvarian scenes and spells: the deployment of birdsong, for one, the understanding art may be both a solace and finally not enough for another. It is also self-evidently the work of an artist thinking seriously about serious matters (mortality, euthanasia, war, climate change). Yet he's doing so at one crucial remove, in a second language, which partially explains why certain elements don't come together or seem irresolvably detached from the core: a fumbled scene between Moore and her personal trainer (Alvise Rigo) that has the shape of comedy but not the laughs Pedro massages into his Spanish films, John Turturro as a horny afterthought, a police investigation halted after five minutes. "Think of this as a rehearsal," Swinton tells Moore in the wake of one false alarm, and Room, strained and self-conscious, does have the feel of a runthrough for one of those illustrious theatrical engagements where star names alone ensure the tickets sell out in ten minutes or less. The best Almodóvars have always had a little of that theatre about them, but they've also been so much more besides - cinema, in fewer words.
The Room Next Door is now playing in selected cinemas.
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