Triangle Of Sadness
classified 15Please note: This was screened in Nov 2022
Riotously funny with a razor-sharp wit, Triangle of Sadness garnered Ruben Östlund (The Square, Force Majeure) his second Cannes Palme d’Or.
Couple Carl and Yaya (Harris Dickinson and the late Charlbi Dean) are fashion models and influencers whose romantic relationship is increasingly soured by money. Offered free places on a luxury cruise, they find themselves sharing a superyacht with a Russian oligarch and some genteel arms dealers, while a deeply cynical Marxist alcoholic captains an increasingly chaotic ship. What begins as a great upstairs/downstairs set-up quickly turns entirely upside-down.
After taking on the art world in The Square, Östlund turns his attentions to high fashion and the uber-rich, channelling a deep vein of acerbic black comedy (in one of the film’s best set pieces, Woody Harrelson’s skipper drunkenly argues class and economic theory with a soused oligarch). Östlund shifts audaciously from bone-dry satire to gross-out maximalist farce over the course of two hours, and with uncompromising clarity, he dissects our dependence on each other, while also examining the dynamics of power and privilege through the prism of beauty, wealth, class and knowledge. It’s a twisted tour-de-force which asserts that power corrupts.