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Chris Knipp
11-05-2007, 05:47 AM
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Roy Andersson: You the Living (2007)

Schadenfreude

This, which was shown dubbed in Italian (not as bad as it sounds) at a Rome cinema after being presented at the Rome Film Festival, is very much an art film and a festival film, guaranteed to charm and delight such audiences for its distinctive style, droll humor; ability to draw comedy from the suffering of others; appealing, cheery music; spot-on performances; overriding sweetness and humanity--but doomed, because of its oddity and lack of a compelling story line, to leave average audiences wondering what they're watching it for and why anyone admires it, how it even got made.

Andersson gives us almost a series of dry skits. Running through them are various themes. Money: a guy at the next table (Waldemar Nowak) nicks the wallet of a rich bore talking on a cell phone in a restaurant over a glass of brandy, then goes and orders a set of posh suits made to order; a deadbeat son calls his celebrated father away from an elaborate gathering to beg him for one more loan. A shrink worries aloud about his depleted investments while his wife humps him in bed wearing only a shiny Viking helmet.

Depression: an elementary teacher (Jessica Nilsson) breaks down in class because her husband has called her a "harpy;" the rug salesman spouse (Par Fredriksson) collapses before clients because he's called her that. Several men have depressing dreams. But hey--this is Sweden. Isn't everybody depressed?

Love problems: a fat bohemian couple is perpetually breaking up; a girl groupie has fantasies about a lead guitarist, Micke (Eric Backman). Wives slam doors when their husbands start to practice their instruments. (Music too is obviously a unifying theme. Besides the dashing guitarist there's a tuba and a drum player who're in a Dixierland band and also play in marches and funerals. Every scene has an added lilt from the music, which niftily links one sequence with another.)

A raging storm outside the window of many scenes, violent rain, people out in it, thunder so loud it sounds like a battle raging across the land. This also unifies the tone and gives the impression various scenes are happening on the same dauntingly tempestuous day.

Andersson is a master of visual composition and the static middle-distance shot and the film has a foggy grey-green look engineered by DP Gustav Danielsson that's perfect because it evokes the gloom of a Swedish winter but also twinkles with the subtle colors of the director's wit, which ends every scene with a smile. One almost never knew drabness could be so beautiful. (Or perhaps one did: Alexcanr Sokurov creates such effects sometimes in very different contexts.) Within scenes and in the film as a whole there's a kind of stillness that comes out of the visual style, the pacing of scenes, and the detached humanism of the overall outlook. There's something about a fully mastered style that's calming, reassuring.

Not everything works equally well. One may feel impatient with the succession of barely related scenes, which read too much sometimes like the work of a Saturday Night Live writer in need of Prozac. Since some scenes plainly move you or draw a laugh, it's obvious that others fall a little flat.

But some scenes are real zingers, and one obviously triumphant climax of pure magic is a dream--described and then visualized dreams being another important thread--in which the girl groupie imagines herself in a wedding'dress newly married to her fey guitarist ideal, who plays a delicate series of riffs while a crowd of admirers gathers outside a big window. The viewpoint switches to outside and the window slides slowly away as if the building the dream newlyweds look out of were a train moving out of a station to take them to their honeymoon. It's a fresh, subtle, and rather sublime effect.

Eventually one may feel everything in You the Living (Du Levande) is a dream, including the recurring scene where the barman is always striking a bronze bell and announcing last order time, whereupon all the torpid customers rise from their tables and go up to get one more drink.

An Italian reviewer called this "a small, great film," and that's right. It limits itself in a dozen ways, but there is greatness in it. Roy Andersson is a little master (like some medieval miniaturist) of the inner comedies of Scandanavian gloom, and this is a film unlike any other. Shown this year as a Cannes "Un Certain Regard" selection, this is also the Swedish entry for the 2007 Best Foreign Oscar. Hard to say what Bergman would think, but Andersson worked with him; is famous for his elaborately produced TV commercials, some of which one can see on YouTube. Bergman called them "the best commercials in the world." It will be interesting to see if this director, whose craft is as subtle as his viewpoint, will start working in longer segments some time. Meanwhile, any good film buff really needs to get a look at this.

Schadenfreude isn't quite the right word. That means delight in the misery of others. Andersson is teaching us to delight in the misery of all of us.

Chris Knipp
07-29-2009, 11:20 PM
YOU, THE LIVING.

News from Film Forum in New York: US theatrical run of this film we talked about in 2008 is beginning. I saw it at a theatrical presentation in Rome following up on the Rome Film Festival in 2007. Oscar saw it at Miami and reviewed (http://www.filmwurld.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&postid=19562#post19562) it as part of the 2008 MIFF.


FILM FORUM NEWSLETTER - Wednesday, July 29, 2009
YOU, THE LIVING
ABSURDIST COMEDY FROM SWEDEN'S VISUAL INNOVATOR
HAS U.S. THEATRICAL PREMIERE TODAY, WEDNESDAY, JULY 29

Showtimes: 1:00, 3:15, 6:00, 8:00, 10:00

For Film Forum's online page on the film premiere, go here. (http://www.filmforum.org/films/you.html)

I wasn't aware of this till they sent me an email about it late today as a member -- even though I was at Film Forum last week to see Somers Town (Shane Meadows) (http://www.filmwurld.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=2613).

oscar jubis
08-13-2009, 05:01 PM
The "distributor" is called Palisades Tartan and, like the only other film they've "distributed" (SILENT LIGHT), they have no intention of showing YOU, THE LIVING anywhere except at Film Forum. The film's a gem. But I'm not sure this 1-screen run constitutes a commercial release. A DVD release is NOT forthcoming. A re-post of my review:

YOU, THE LIVING (SWEDEN)

Be pleased then, you living one
in your delightfully warm bed
before Lethe's ice-cold wave
will lick your escaping foot
F.W. Goethe

Goethe's exhortation to enjoy life when it's good because it won't remain so is the inspiration behind Roy Andersson's fourth feature. Like Songs From the Second Floor, his Cannes Jury Prize winner, You, the Living links a series of vignettes involving a cross-section of Swedish society. The new film has a wider emotional range and tone. A number of sequences are like snapshots from an absurdist play by Eugene Ionesco. Many are serio-comic, mixing humor with social commentary in differing proportions. There are a couple of unabashedly sweet moments that might surprise Andersson aficionados.

A chubby couple dressed in leather and animal print walk their dog Bobbo in the park. The woman sits on a bench loudly lamenting how nobody loves or understands her. Her patient husband replies that he and Bobbo love her. She retorts that they're both faking it and belts out a funny, miserablist song accompanied by a brass band heard on the soundtrack. A bit later, at a bar, the woman waits for a beer while ignoring her husband's plea to call it a night. The bartender rings a bell. The woman screams: "Last chance to get plastered, you bums!

An old-money family's dinner guest attempts to impress by performing the old trick of removing the tablecloth without disturbing what's resting on it. It's absurd to try because the table is impossibly long. But he proceeds anyway and breaks an expensive, antique china set. The bare wooden table is revealed to have inlaid swastikas. The room is full of anger, laughter, disbelief, embarrasment.

A cute girl infatuated with a rock guitarrist faces the camera to relate a dream she had. In it, she marries the guy of her dreams and they're inside their small house still wearing tux and white wedding dress. Then the house begins to move about town and you realize it's traveling along train tracks. The house comes to a stop and the whole town comes to their window to congratulate them and wish them well. They break into song as the smiling couple wave goodbye and the house begins to move again.

A skinny old man lays naked on his back discussing his money woes while his curvy wife, wearing nothing but a viking helmet, straddles him and moans with pleasure.
A woman enjoying a bubble bath sweetly sings a song about a town where there's no strife. Her husband observes from another room.

You get the idea, I hope. Andersson keeps his camera static most of the time and favors muted pastel colors. His staging is painterly composed, with dynamic interplay between what's on the background and the foreground. In You, the Living, Andersson looks at the struggles and fleeting joys of living with an attitude of bemusement that's both delightful and substantive.

Chris Knipp
08-13-2009, 05:44 PM
A run at Film Forum means many major reviews, which will do much for the film's US reputation. Here from IndieWire:
Round-Up: The critics are sending out a resounding call to see "You, the Living." V.A. Musetto of the New York Post calls it "the funniest movie of 2009 (so far)" and goes on to praise the director, "Andersson has a one-of-a-kind style that not all viewers will appreciate. His humor is not at all like Hollywood's. His is leisurely and cerebral -- two words never heard in La La Land." A.O. Scott offers a paradoxical endorsement: "The film is slow, rigorously morose and often painful in its blunt reckoning of disappointment and failure. It is also extremely funny." In Empire, David Parksinson finds a comparison in a comedic master, "Recalling the work of Jacques Tati, this is a grim but amusing and ultimately successful effort." Comparing it to the master of bromantic comedies, New York Press's Armond White says, "More laughs—belly-deep, thought-provoking ones—are to be had in the first 10 minutes of Roy Andersson’s 'You, the Living' than in all of Judd Apatow’s 'Funny People.'" I didn't re-do the links but you will find this with them here. (http://www.indiewire.com/film/you_the_living_du_levande/)