Ron's rages are sincere and — according to his wife — healthily cathartic. But can these splenetic outbursts loosen the grip of capitalism at its most monstrous?
FACED with one of the strongest competitions for some time, in which half a dozen films could legitimately lay claim to the Golden Lion prize, Alexandre Desplat and his international jury threw the balls into the air and came up with one that few considered among the best — Roy Andersson’s A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence.
This film is the final part of a loosely connected trilogy about “what it is to be human” which began with Songs from the Second Floor and continued in You, the Living.
It’s a comic drama which tells the story of two distinctly oddball travelling salesmen as they interact with other characters in a kaleidoscopic journey through the humour and tragedy hidden within every human. A rare pleasure and Swedish director Andersson does an extraordinary job.
RITA DI SANTO talks to Scottish-Irish filmmaker MARK COUSINS about his new panorama of world cinema The Story of Documentary Film
MARIA DUARTE, JAMES WALSH and ANDY HEDGECOCK review The Invite, My Father’s Island, Nirvanna: the Band, the Show, the Movie, and Oh My Goodness!
RITA DI SANTO takes us through the prize winners, and takes the temperature of a festival that prioritised narratives of exile, state violence and class division
RITA DI SANTO gives us a first look at some extraordinary new films that examine outsiders, migrants, belonging and social abuse


