You, the Living flips through 50-some single-panel vignettes, many very funny, arranged by Roy Andersson, a Swedish director best known for his commercial work and 2000s Songs From the Second Floor. An (almost always) stationary camera captures a procession of lugubrious Stockholmians; the caption to most of the stills could be I cant go on. Connections between scenes are loose, if any. A heaplike fiftyish biker gal replays teen-angst classics (Nobody understands me!) for her boyfriend in a public park. A man hunched over a walker obliviously drags his pet terrier behind him, tangled in its leash. A prematurely embalmed-looking fellow complains about his pension plans while his stout Brünnhilde of a wife mounts him. Andersson delights particularly in left-outs: the guy who cant squeeze into the busstop during a downpour; the natty little suitor getting his bouquet smashed in a slamming door. The sum total is the reflection of a worldviewsad sack, bordering on Everybody Hurts black-velvet sad-clown bathosrather than any narrative. The title comes from Goethes Roman Elegies, an admonition to appreciate ones measure of life before Lethes ice-cold wave will lick your escaping foot. This I take to be one of Anderssons dry jokes, as his anhedonic characters already seem settled in Hadesa streetcar even lists Lethe as its destination.
Sept. 25-Oct. 1, 2009