Triangle of Sadness
Photo courtesy of Neon

Triangle of Sadness

In his 2014 dark satire “Force Majeure” the gleefully cynical observer of modernity Ruben Östlund showed us you never know who you are — or who you’re married to — until disaster strikes. A little snow was all the Swedish director needed to unravel the relationship of two business-class yuppies on holiday with their children in the French Alps. In “Triangle of Sadness” (an early punchline title too good to spoil), he has a fuller cast of characters on board his luxury superyacht, and therefore more disaster must be conjured to stir up his raging tempest in a teacup. The winner of the Palme d’Or at Cannes this year, the film stars Harris Dickinson and the late Charlbi Dean as two runway models and social media influencers who straddle economic worlds in their of-the-moment social class. They are beautiful people invited to beautiful places, cogs in the machine of digital marketing, their posh trappings disguising their low wages and working class hustle. Dickinson’s hapless male model is a laugh-out-loud skewering of a man negotiating his own masculinity, well-versed in the theoretical gender debates of our time but completely unable to understand the actual women around him.

“Triangle of Sadness” begins at the The Moviehouse in Millerton, N.Y. on Nov. 4.

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