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3.0/10 • 3

2024-10-181h 44m

ComedyFantasyHorror

The Official Motion Picture of the G7.

En route to the annual G7 summit, the seven leaders of the world’s wealthiest liberal democracies get lost in the woods and face increasing peril while attempting to draft a provisional statement regarding a global crisis.

Directors
Guy Maddin, Galen Johnson, Evan Johnson
Writters
Guy Maddin
Editors
Guy Maddin, Galen Johnson

Top Billed Cast

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  1. Cate Blanchett

    Cate Blanchett

    Hilda Orlmann

  2. Roy Dupuis

    Roy Dupuis

    Maxime Laplace

  3. Nikki Amuka-Bird

    Nikki Amuka-Bird

    Cardosa Dewindt

  4. Charles Dance

    Charles Dance

    Edison Wolcott

  5. Takehiro Hira

    Takehiro Hira

    Tatsuro Iwasaki

  6. Denis Ménochet

    Denis Ménochet

    Sylvain Broulez

  7. Rolando Ravello

    Rolando Ravello

    Antonio Lamorle

  8. Zlatko Burić

    Zlatko Burić

    Jonas Glob

  9. Alicia Vikander

    Alicia Vikander

    Celestine Sproul

Reviews1

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Brent Marchant Avatar

Brent Marchant

Oct 19, 2024

3/10

Truly good satire needs a razor-sharp edge to succeed, but this latest effort from director Guy Maddin (in collaboration with filmmaking partners Evan and Galen Johnson) falls stunningly flat, resulting in a rambling, unfocused slog that somehow manages to mix messages and symbology that are simultaneously both cryptically understated and patently obvious. Set at a G7 summit in Germany, world leaders from the host country and their American, Canadian, British, French, Italian and Japanese counterparts (along with delegates from the European Union) hold their annual gathering to discuss the state of the world and pat themselves on the back for a self-congratulatory job well done (despite not possessing the requisite skills to accomplish anything meaningful or of substantive consequence other than keeping their nations’ respective seats warm). They smile their hollow smiles and make empty though allegedly profound observations about a variety of subjects, all while attempting to craft one of their famous joint statements (position papers that the American president openly admits no one ever reads). In this case, the communique is meant to address some kind of undefined global crisis, but it appears to be one with apocalyptic overtones. But, in the course of their “work” – an undertaking for which they’re far from qualified – they quickly find themselves in over their heads when the infrastructure around them begins to crumble, a circumstance made more ominous by the appearance of inexplicable apparitions and zombie-like bog creatures straight out of classic folklore and middle European fairy tales. One might think that this would make for an interesting premise in telling a surrealistically satirical fable about the state of contemporary world politics, but the execution here is so poorly carried off that it ends up amounting to little more than oh so much intellectual and symbolic masturbation (depicted here a little too literally and repetitively at that). To complicate matters, the narrative incorporates countless developments that go wholly unexplained, some of which presumably have to do with the symbolic emasculation of a prevailing patriarchal world in favor of an emerging female-directed paradigm, but others of which are just so enigmatically absurd that they defy description, explanation or purpose (there’s more of that masturbation again, only this time reflected in the nature of the picture’s screenplay elements). The overall result is a mess of a movie that, despite its gifted ensemble cast and atmospheric cinematography and production design, just doesn’t work, especially since the insights it’s trying to impart aren’t particularly new, revelatory or funny. We’re well aware of how inept many of the world’s supposedly astute leaders are these days, including the fact that they’re cluelessly engaged in little more than what amounts to unconscious acts of that aforementioned “self-love” (and self-aggrandizing ones at that), but do we really need a movie to remind us of that (especially one as shabbily made as this)? No thanks. If I were you, I’d duck out of this one and see what else is playing at the multiplex (or, better yet, skip it altogether).

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Status
Released
Original Language
English
Budget
--
Revenue
--
Keywords
politiciansatirewoodsapocalypsezombiezombie apocalypsehorror comedyglobal crisis