Entertainment

'Be quiet and die' - Malkovich as first-century life coach Seneca

March 1, 2023 6:06 pm

[Source: Reuters]

Is it better, when asked to serve a tyrant, to enter the inner circles and try to moderate his whims, or to stand aside, revelling in your integrity as his rages consume the world?

“Seneca – On the Creation of Earthquakes” seeks an answer to this question, both very contemporary and eternal, in the last night of the first-century Roman philosopher’s life, after he learns the Emperor Nero has ordered his death.

“All these dilemmas, political, personal, philosophical would come to a head in one night and that would end with his death,” director Robert Schwentke said of his film, which premieres at the Berlin Film Festival on Monday.

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The film, shot in Morocco on minimalist, theatrical sets, has little sympathy for its main character, played by John Malkovich as a man of a glibness so total that not even his impending death can stop the torrent of pat wisdom from his mouth.

“He talks a lot,” said Malkovich. “And sometimes it was hard not to think, OK, but die and, you know, be quiet.”

Nero, played by Tom Xander, is callous and childlike, willing to kill or humiliate anyone who would constrain him. He soon turns on Seneca, tiring of his minimally moderating influence.

“There was a lot of opportunity to draw on current events and influence my performance,” said Xander.

Seneca’s monstrousness is more understated. He asks his young wife, played by an ethereal Lilith Stangenberg, to die with him to lend theatrical weight to his death and his dictums.

“He talks a lot,” said Malkovich. “And sometimes it was hard not to think, OK, but die and, you know, be quiet.”

Nero, played by Tom Xander, is callous and childlike, willing to kill or humiliate anyone who would constrain him. He soon turns on Seneca, tiring of his minimally moderating influence.

“There was a lot of opportunity to draw on current events and influence my performance,” said Xander.

Seneca’s monstrousness is more understated. He asks his young wife, played by an ethereal Lilith Stangenberg, to die with him to lend theatrical weight to his death and his dictums.