Interviews London Film Festival 2022

Triangle of Sadness: On the red carpet with Ruben Östlund at London Film Festival 2022

Triangle of Sadness: On the red carpet with Ruben Östlund at London Film Festival 2022
Triangle of Sadness: On the red carpet with Ruben Östlund at London Film Festival 2022

Far and away this writer’s film of the year, Triangle of Sadness is now landing in UK cinemas after an impressive run on the festival circuit that included clinching the Palme d’Or in Cannes. With vicious and hilarious precision, Ruben Östlund (The Square) takes aim at the rich and entitled, subjecting his ultra-loaded characters to untold humiliation with bold and brazen abandon.

Split into three acts, the narrative first presents the characters of Carl and Yaya (Harris Dickinson and the late Charlbi Dean), an influencer/model couple navigating life under scrutiny at catwalk auditions (viewers will no doubt find themselves inspecting their own triangles of sadness) and arguing over who should pick up the bill for their extravagant lifestyle choices. Once they set sail on a luxury yacht trip – a freebie in exchange for relentless social media posting – we then meet a smattering of other obnoxious members of the financial elite. All is turned on its head, however, when things start to go awry and the billionaire guests are left to fend for themselves. Highlights include The Shining-like scenes involving vomit and diarrhoea, Woody Harrelson’s drunken ship captain embroiled in a battle of wits between socialist and capitalist ideals with a Russian billionaire, and a lowly cleaner emerging as the most powerful individual among them. Call it comedy, call it satire, call it “eat the rich” made manifest, packaged in a glossy veneer suitable for mainstream consumption – as the cost of living crisis tightens its grip, this film will no doubt take on increased resonance as a form of cathartic retribution for the injustice of the capitalist system. 

The Upcoming caught up with the acclaimed Swedish filmmaker on the red carpet at the London Film Festival 2022. He shared how he wanted to bring social commentary to a wide audience through his film and his approach to pulling off some of the film’s more extreme scenes.

We also heard from renowned stage and screen actor Oliver Ford Davies (Star Wars, Game of Thrones), who plays bourgeois arms dealer Winston, about working on the set and what he thinks the movie’s takeaways are. 

Catch more highlights from the red carpet below.

Sarah Bradbury

Triangle of Sadness is released nationwide on 28th October 2022. Read our review here.

Read more reviews and interviews from our London Film Festival 2022 coverage here.

For further information about the festival visit the official BFI website here.

Watch the trailer for Triangle of Sadness here:

More in Interviews

“The show deals in the old and the new and the paranormal”: Ben Stegmair and Molly Zhang on Daemons of the Shadow Realm

Mae Trumata

“It’s the hope, it’s the cornerstone of my own heart, it’s the pillar of my own beliefs”: Aaron Dismuke, Felecia Angelle and Brandon McInnis on Dr Stone Future Science Cour 3

Mae Trumata

“It’s a love letter to the power of imagination and creation”: Joshua A Waters and Madeleine Morris on Witch Hat Atelier

Mae Trumata

High Society: On the red carpet with VIP attendees at the Barbican premiere

Ezelle Alblas

“If we keep trying, we can connect with the ones we love, despite our differences”: David Ricardo-Pearce and Joshua Sullivan on Harry Potter and the Cursed Child at Palace Theatre

Cristiana Ferrauti

“Theatre will always be that girl”: Madeline Charlemagne on The Harder They Come at Theatre Royal Stratford East

Benedetta Mancusi

“Like Seinfeld, it’s just people hanging out and then the show is funny”: Sam Campbell, Joe Pelling, Helen Bauer and David Hargreaves on Make That Movie

Antonia Georgiou

“What makes it so spectacular is that it has a very strong cultural heartbeat to it”: Poorna Jagannathan, Michelle Nader, Asif Ali and Saagar Shaikh on Deli Boys season two

Mae Trumata

“While space is hostile in this story, the most hostile environment is on the ground”: Rhys Ifans, Anna Maxwell Martin, Agnes O’Casey, Alice Englert, Ben Nedivi, Matt Wolpert and Nick Murphy on Star City

Antonia Georgiou