A milquetoast software genius ( Oliver Ford Davies) comes to life when two pretty women take a photo with him. Carl gets jealous of a shirtless worker that catches Yaya’s eye and so basically gets him fired. A woman ( Mia Benson) insists that the ship’s sails must be cleaned-the yacht has no sails. Östlund's intent plays out in a series of bitter exchanges. From the beginning of this segment, Östlund is toying with literal levels of society as the rich people sun on the deck above, the white staff celebrate their potential tips in the middle, and the largely non-white staff sits in the hull below. Most of them have earned generational wealth through ventures that haven’t exactly bettered the world, such as the kind elderly couple whose fortune comes from grenades or the gentleman who likes to tell people he made his money with shit-he’s a fertilizer magnate. (She will take photos of herself with pasta near her mouth but not actually eat it.) It’s here that Östlund plays a little “Upstairs, Downstairs,” introducing us to a crew of people so wealthy that they’ve lost all touch with average reality. The mid-section of “Triangle of Sadness” takes place aboard a yacht that Yaya and Carl have been invited to socially promote. As I felt he did with “The Square” too, Östlund has a habit of getting distracted by a similar idea without doing the work to tie it back to the previous one in a satisfying way. This is a very promising prologue for “Triangle of Sadness,” an implication that the movie is going to get into gender roles and transactional relationships in a way that’s sharp and new.Īnd then it doesn’t quite do that. The two argue about her gender-based assumptions and Östlund’s dialogue spins and swirls as the discussion goes back to the hotel that Yaya notes she’s covering for Carl. The bill has sat there for long enough to make Carl realize that his girlfriend has no intention of paying, even though she said last night she would do so. A short film of its own, it introduces us to two dating models, Carl ( Harris Dickinson) and Yaya ( Charlbi Dean) at the end of a fancy dinner. Of course, “Triangle of Sadness” tells a three-act story, the first of which might actually be my favorite.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |