City Times

Adam Driver explores violence of divorce

-

MARRIAGE STORY,

THE new critically adored divorce drama starring Adam Driver and Scarlett Johansson, is a cautionary tale of the sudden violence with which a relationsh­ip can be ripped apart, the actor said.

The movie received rave reviews last week at its world premiere in Venice — the same week that director Martin Scorsese chose to praise Driver, as “one of the best actors of his generation.”

Driver — best known to wider audiences as the villainous Kylo Ren in Star Wars — has been widely tipped for Oscar glory for his portrayal of a narcissist­ic New York theater director in his latest film.

Speaking on the red carpet at Toronto’s film festival, Driver said the movie explores how a seemingly stable love can “transition,” as his character’s wife moves to LA to pursue the acting career she has long put on hold, taking their child with her.

“If you know someone where you’re in the room together and it’s second nature, and suddenly that’s not there anymore, it can be a violent thing — internally I mean, not physically violent,” said Driver.

“Where you lose love and you don’t know how to articulate it.”

The former US Marineturn­ed-tv star (Girls) has enjoyed a phenomenal rise in recent years, working with directors such as Steven Spielberg (Lincoln), the Coen brothers (Inside Llewyn Davis) and Scorsese (Silence).

Driver — whose own parents split when he was a child — said everyone in the cast of Marriage Story

had their own relationsh­ip with divorce to draw on, “whether you’ve been divorced or you’re a child of divorce.”

Marriage Story is his fourth collaborat­ion with arthouse favorite Noah Baumbach, who wrote and directed the movie.

Baumbach came to prominence with 2005’s The Squid and the Whale,

the semi-autobiogra­phy.

He proposed Marriage Story to Johansson during her own divorce from French businessma­n Romain Dauriac.

“We all take stuff that’s personal to us,” Baumbach said, adding: “You see the actors doing that — they’re clearly revealing very personal emotional material.”

The movie has been praised by Variety as an “exquisite combinatio­n of love and heartbreak,” and by the Guardian as an “agonized, jagged remake of Kramer vs Kramer.”

It will be available on Netflix from December 6.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates