Daily Breeze (Torrance)

All about relationsh­ips

Tilda Swinton reunites with a childhood pal filmmaker for a meditation on mother-daughter ties

- By Stuart Miller Correspond­ent

When a Tesla designer threw a metal ball at one of the armored windows, it shattered. He then threw the ball at another window … which also shattered.

“This one does not have the broken windows. The windows have been replaced, but yes, it is the same Cybertruck,” Nyiri confirmed.

Another prototype on display is a vehicle Tesla hopes will replace gas-guzzling big rig trucks. It's a long-haul commercial electric truck that can reach 500 miles per charge.

“The Semi is hopefully going to revolution­ize cargo transport in this country,” Nyiri said. “To be able to achieve 300 or 500 miles of range on a single charge, the Semi will really help with the climate-focused vision of the company.”

Since this is a larger vehicle, there is a scale model on display, but the real deal is parked just outside the museum.

Tesla's speed is also on view with the Tesla Model S Plaid.

With 1,020 horsepower, a top speed of 200 mph and a nearly 400-mile range, the car set the record for fastest production lap by an electric vehicle at the famed Nordschlei­fe track in Germany, where high-performanc­e cars are tested.

The Model S Plaid sped through the 13 miles and 170 corners of the track in just over seven minutes.

“It is used to test supercars,” Nyiri said of the track. “They all test there, and the Tesla reached its top speed of 200 mph.”

As a child, Tilda Swinton always felt like an outsider, an observer of others, sometimes even in her own family. One day at the British boarding school she loathed, she met another girl, Joanna Hogg, who shared a similar worldview. (Another classmate was Diana Spencer, the future princess.)

“We were two aliens, if you like. It was that wonderful thing of being isolated, but together in that,” Swinton recalls a half-century later, sitting on a couch in Manhattan with her lifelong friend, discussing their latest collaborat­ion, “The Eternal Daughter,” which arrives in theaters today. Hogg wrote and directed the film; Swinton stars.

“There was a feeling of not being in step at the school, so we took refuge in each other,” Hogg adds, prompting Swinton to note that “nothing has changed,” which sparks a burst of laughter from the two women.

Swinton says that as children they weren't consciousl­y plotting future film careers — “There wasn't a point where we stopped talking about treehouses and started talking about cinema” — but she argues that it was all happening below the surface.

“We enjoyed the mutual experience of sharing awareness about the energy of groups, the unspoken tendencies of other people,” she says. “We were always feeling between our fingers and our thumbs the metal of the kind of work we're creating now.”

When Hogg studied photograph­y in their late teens, she used the distinctiv­e Swinton as one of her models (Swinton recently found photos from that period), and when Hogg moved into filmmaking it was “a seamless transition” — they collaborat­ed on two projects, one unfinished and one, “Caprice,” that became Hogg's graduation project from National Film and Television School in 1986.

By that point, Swinton was a member of the Royal Shakespear­e Company. Her first feature film, “Caravaggio,” came out the following year, directed by Derek Jarman, who was a mentor to both women.

At that point, their careers diverged: Hogg spent most of the next two decades directing television in Britain, enjoying success but chafing at the restrictio­ns. Swinton first made her mark in 1992's “Orlando,” about an androgynou­s nobleman in the Elizabetha­n era, but was mostly below the radar as well until the 21st century.

Finally, it seemed the world caught up to what Hogg and Swinton had to offer: Starting in 2007, Hogg directed three critically acclaimed features in six years (“Unrelated,” “Archipelag­o” and “Exhibition”); in 2007, Swinton won an Oscar for her supporting role in “Michael Clayton,” which she followed with distinctiv­e turns in films like “Burn After Reading,” “Snowpierce­r,” “The Grand Budapest Hotel” and “We Need to Talk About Kevin.”

In 2019, more than 30 years after their last film collaborat­ion, the two reunited on Hogg's semiautobi­ographical movie “The Souvenir.” Swinton played Rosalind, a standin for Hogg's mother, and Hogg cast Swinton's daughter, Honor Swinton Byrne, to play her own alter ego, Julie. They reunited for a sequel last year.

“Tilda knew my mother and I knew hers,” Hogg says. “There was a knowledge there and no research needed.”

Now they are back together again — Hogg and Swinton as well as Julie and Rosalind. But “Eternal Daughter” is very different from its predecesso­rs.

A haunting meditation on familial bonds, it is filmed like a ghost story, with fog swirling around a large and ominous inn that is run by an enigmatic desk clerk and filled with slowly creaking doors and plagued by poor cellphone reception.

But despite the setting and mood, this is not a movie about jump scares and things that go bump in the night — the fears in the movie are more prosaic and profound, as Julie struggles to accept the idea that she is going to lose her increasing­ly frail mother.

“The genre aspect is very tied into the worries that Julie has and the fabric of their relationsh­ip,” Hogg says. “They're not different things.”

This film, like “The Souvenirs,” is emotionall­y autobiogra­phical.

“I always worried about my mother and saw her as fragile, but maybe I just perceived her as that and then she became really fragile, which brought out the eternal daughter in me,” Hogg says. “It was always strong, but it intensifie­d then. The core of the film is about grief — you can feel the loss when someone's still alive. I felt like I was grieving my mother years before she died.”

Hogg had struggled writing the film and separating out her real relationsh­ip from the fictional one until she decided to make the characters older versions of Julie and Rosalind.

“Then I didn't feel the same responsibi­lity like I was trespassin­g on our lives,” she says. “Well, that's not entirely true — I still felt guilty but I'm getting over it.”

She knew she wanted Swinton to play Julie but was struggling to conceive of an appropriat­e older actress to play Rosalind until Swinton made a suggestion. “I'd already establishe­d myself as Rosalind in `The Souvenirs' so I said, `Maybe I can play both.' ”

Hogg needed no persuading. “It was a brilliant idea,” she says. “What the film is about was born in that moment. Before, it was about two people — the idea of `My mother is myself' was there, but this made it a concrete thing.”

The lack of separation from her mother Hogg always felt, she acknowledg­ed “is not a healthy state.” It has not changed since her mother died while Hogg was editing the film.

“I'm more accepting of the eternal part of being a daughter now when I'm saying something my mother would have said,” Hogg says, “I take comfort in it because I want to be reminded of her.”

“This morning we started to have our mothers' breakfasts,” Swinton adds, noting that she didn't feel much “crossover” with her mother until she died a decade ago.

“But since then, there's been this strange picking up of her frequency,” Swinton says. “I'm wearing clothes she wore, but even stranger, I'm wearing the types of things she wore and saying turns of phrase that only she used. And I was not doing it consciousl­y or for my own sake — it's a strange sort of, one can almost say, possession or incarnatio­n.”

 ?? PHOTO BY SANDRO KOPP ?? 10 a.m.-5 p.m. daily through October
Petersen Automotive Museum, 6060 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles
$19 general, $17 for those 62 or older, $12 for ages 4-17. Vault tours are an additional $20. Children younger than 10 are not permitted on vault tours.
323930-2277, petersen.org.
Tilda Swinton appears in “The Eternal Daughter,” in which a woman must face the loss of her mother.
PHOTO BY SANDRO KOPP 10 a.m.-5 p.m. daily through October Petersen Automotive Museum, 6060 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles $19 general, $17 for those 62 or older, $12 for ages 4-17. Vault tours are an additional $20. Children younger than 10 are not permitted on vault tours. 323930-2277, petersen.org. Tilda Swinton appears in “The Eternal Daughter,” in which a woman must face the loss of her mother.

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