
One of Jim Jarmusch’s strengths as a storyteller rests in his ability to take a long standing genre, whether it’s a Western (DeadMan) or a crime drama (Ghost Dog: Way of the Samurai), and transform them into visually stirring and evocative examinations of our own mortality.
Vampires are Jim Jarmusch’s obsession with his latest film Only Lovers Left Alive, and although Adam (Tom Hiddleston) and Eve (Tilda Swinton) hunger for blood, they are equally dependent on each other. Jarmusch has described his film, which was inspired by the Mark Twain book The Diaries of Adam and Eve, as a love story between two outsiders who have “a vast overview of human and natural history, including stunning achievements and tragic and brutal failures.”

As with most of Jarmusch’s work, expect a healthy share of fluid, lingering camera movements coupled with long (and thankfully interesting) conversations about love, humanity, and sometimes absolutely nothing at all. Most notably, Only Lovers Left Alive, aside from a few moments of vampirism, is mainly focused on two beings who’ve lived, and loved, through the centuries.
“We wanted it to be about a marriage in which they talk, as long relationships do,” said Swinton, who previously collaborated with Jarmusch in BrokenFlowers and The Limits of Control. “There’s a tradition of sort of showing people coming together and then (it’s) the end. You never really see them actually living it out. Living the ups and the downs and talking it through. Chewing the cud. We really spent a lot of time wanting to get that tone of people who were family…they are the same kind, and that’s why they still dig each other, even through they are so different.”

“That’s how I relate to her, as well as just being a very strong, empowered woman.” said Woodley, who cites compassion and empathy as two qualities she learned at an early age from her parents. “I feel very strong, and I live my life with a lot of integrity based on what I want from my life and who I am. And I think Tris is similar.”

“It’s like slipping on a glove when I slip on that suit,” said the actor. “You really fully belong when you grasp the character.”
Although the base of the narrative centers on the pair’s foolhardy attempts to get one over on a bunch of mobsters, some of the story’s more evocative moments come at the hands of 



