
The Souvenir
Joanna Hogg / GB, US, 2019 / 120 min.
Tilda Swinton and her daughter Honor Swinton Byrne impress in this luxurious, dreamy portrait of a film school student in 1980s London. She becomes romantically involved with a mysterious and erudite man who upends her life. On January 28 Tilda Swinton and Joanna Hogg will introduce the film.

A shy, yet ambitious film student (Honor Swinton Byrne) is just starting to find her voice as an artist when, during the 1980s she enters into a turbulent relationship with a charismatic, erudite heroin addict and dandy (Tom Burke), a guru-like father figure. She distances herself from her overprotective mother (Tilda Swinton) and concerned friends and goes even deeper into an intense, emotionally charged affair that comes dangerously close to self-destruction.
The much-lauded writer-director Joanna Hogg turned the kaleidoscopic The Souvenir into a mysterious, personal portrait of ‘the artist as a young woman’. The lavish, dreamy story about a young adult and first love is replete with refined aesthetics. Director Joanna Hogg prefers static shots, long takes and leads with claustrophobic interior lives.
This is the first time the British filmmaker has focused on her own history, which she does using her portrait of the 25-year-old Julie. Just like Hogg, this posh kid takes a film course and moves into a flat in London during the 1980s, a replica of the one Hogg inhabited at the time. Hogg’s childhood friend and aspiring actress Tilda Swinton played in Hogg’s graduation film Caprice from 1986. In The Souvenir she plays Julie’s mother. Hogg and Swinton both went to the same boarding school and always remained friends.
Best film 2019
‘A social-realist film about posh people’ is how The Guardian described The Souvenir. And: ‘A contemporary answer to Antonioni and Visconti’. The leading British film magazine Sight and Sound crowned the film best film of the year for 2019 which was the first time in a decade that the prize was won by a British production.
Pre-film
Tilda Swinton hand-picked a short film, either from her rich oeuvre or from Eye’s collection, to precede all feature films. Before The Souvenir you will see the short British film Flat 19 (2025, 5’) by Joanna Hogg (except on 28-1). The film was made during the development of the installation Hogg created for the exhibition Tilda Swinton - Ongoing. Tilda Swinton interacts with a scale model of the London flat she lived in at a formative point in her life. As a vessel for her memories, the model becomes a key to remembering that time.
Joanna Hogg Retrospective
From 8 January through 4 February, Eye will highlight the oeuvre of British photographer, screenwriter, and filmmaker Joanna Hogg. During these four weeks, all of Joanna Hogg's films will be screened.
Hogg will visit Eye for two talks: on 27 January, a special evening dedicated to her working methods, inspirations, and collaborations will take place. Using excerpts from her films, ranging from her earliest (previously unseen) cinematic experiments to her most contemporary work, recurring themes in her work will be explored. Her first and last short films will also be screened.
On 28 January, a conversation between Tilda Swinton and Joanna Hogg will go into how their lives, particularly the relationship between mothers and daughters, influenced the films they made together, such as The Souvenir and The Eternal Daughter. On 28 January, Swinton and Hogg will introduce a screening of The Souvenir.
This is part of
Details
Director
Joanna Hogg
Production year
2019
Country
GB, US
Original title
The Souvenir
Length
120 min.
Language
English
Subtitles
NLD
Format
DCP
Part of
Tilda Swinton
This autumn, Eye presents Tilda Swinton – Ongoing, an exclusive exhibition dedicated to the celebrated Scottish performer, artist, and fashion icon. This unique and personal exhibition centres on Swinton’s creative collaborations.

Why in Eye
Joanna Hogg - my friend since I was ten - talked for years about making a film drawing on a particular period in our shared life. Never did I suspect that the film we came to make decades later would feature me as her mother and my own daughter as Joanna’s avatar. The first in a deeply personal trilogy of films about Julie and Rosalind Harte.
Tilda Swinton
Actor and Performer


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