Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Triangle of Sadness

Another film that has received a lot of buzz from the fall film festivals (it won the Palme d'Or at Cannes) is Triangle of Sadness and I finally had a chance to see it at the Broadway last night.  I laughed out loud during the entirety of this dark comedy and I was not alone!  A fashion model named Carl (Harris Dickinson) and his influencer girlfriend Yaya (Charlbi Dean) are given a free luxury cruise in the Mediterranean Sea aboard a $50 million superyacht.  The head steward Paula (Vicki Berlin) insists that the crew indulge the whims of the wealthy passengers, even when one of them insists that every member of staff go down the slide into the water which delays dinner, while the intoxicated captain, Tom (Woody Harrelson), hides in his cabin and the mostly Filipino cleaning crew slave away behind the scenes.  After an attack by pirates, a small group of passengers including Carl and Yaya, a Russian oligarch named Dimitry (Zlatko Buric), a debilitated stroke survivor named Therese (Iris Berben) who can only speak one sentence in German, and a lonely tech millionaire named Jarmo (Henrik Dorsin) land on what they believe to be a deserted island with a member of the cleaning crew named Abigail (Dolly de Leon) and a mechanic named Winston (Oliver Ford Davies).  The power dynamic of the group shifts with comedic results when Abigail is the only one who has any survival skills.  This is an absolutely hilarious social satire taking aim at the vacuous and shallow idle rich.  My favorite scene is when the passengers are invited to an incredibly pretentious dinner with the captain during a violent storm causing many of them to become seasick which, despite the fact that it involves just about every type of bodily fluid, is a lot of fun and serves to dismantle class divisions in an absurdly amusing way.  I really appreciated the message that people should not be judged solely on their wealth or looks but rather their knowledge, abilities, and experience and that it pays to treat the people who serve you with kindness and respect.  The cast is fantastic but de Leon gives a standout performance in the third act and I am still thinking about her character's actions in the final scene.  I recommend seeing this wildly entertaining film with the biggest crowd possible!

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