The most ingenious film comedy since Being John Malkovich.
Songs from the Second Floor (2002)
Tomatometer
How does the Tomatometer work ![]()
Reviews Counted:33
Fresh:29
Rotten:4
Average Rating:7.5/10
Runtime: 1 hr 39 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: In this surreal Swedish film from director Roy Andersson, a toxic green light colors each scene, setting the story in a bleak post modern world. The economy is failing, as is the stability of the... In this surreal Swedish film from director Roy Andersson, a toxic green light colors each scene, setting the story in a bleak post modern world. The economy is failing, as is the stability of the human psyche, and even as the story relies heavily on order and structure, rooting itself in organized settings--the train station, the board room table, the hospital, the business conference--the action and dialogue strays into a nonsensical, backwards, impossible place. Darkly comic and relentlessly bizarre, SONGS FROM THE SECOND FLOOR is like a Fellini film in slow motion, or a David Lynch film drained of color, or an abstract Monty Python comedy. Structured around the ominous statement "Beloved is the one who sits down" by the poet Cesar Vallejo, the movie is organized into vaguely related vignettes, all occurring in adjacent locations at almost the same point in time, and occasionally overlapping. The characters in Andersson's film wear business suits. They are sickly pale, and very puffy and unhealthy looking. They wander aimlessly but with instinctive purpose, perpetually suffering bad luck, and following daily routines that often end in gruesome injury, drunkenness, death, or just plain weirdness. A badly burned man who has just set his office building on fire rides the subway expressionless, while all the other passengers sing opera loudly and in unison. A failed crucifix salesman angrily unloads a truck full of Jesuses at the dump, flinging the crosses into a giant ghastly pile. A young girl is selected by a group of executives to be sacrificed, and at a ceremony attended by clergymen, businessmen, and hundreds of other officials, she is pushed off a cliff. This artistic, visually engrossing, and conceptually awe-inspiring film competed at Cannes in 2001. [More]
Starring: Lars Nordh, Stefan Larsson, Lucio Vucina, Hasse Soderholm
Starring: Lars Nordh, Stefan Larsson, Lucio Vucina, Hasse Soderholm, Torbjorn Fahlstrom, Klas Gosta Olsson
Director: Roy Andersson
Director: Roy Andersson
Producer: Lisa Alwert, Philippe Bober
Composer: Benny Andersson
Get This Movie
Reviews for Songs from the Second Floor
Let your literal, linear self take a chance on Songs From the Second Floor. Andersson is a philosopher with a brilliant eye for composing his ideas on the big screen.
A macabre and very stylized Swedish fillm about a modern city where all the religious and civic virtues that hold society in place are in tatters.
Depressive, slow, darkly funny, unyielding in its formal rigor, and unsettlingly beautiful.
A brilliant, absurd collection of vignettes that, in their own idiosyncratic way, sum up the strange horror of life in the new millennium.
It's almost as if it's an elaborate dare more than a full-blooded film.
At once wickedly funny and deeply disturbing, Andersson's deadpan, apocalyptic tone poem conjures up an exquisitely hermetic vision of mankind at the final buzzer.
This is cruel, misanthropic stuff with only weak claims to surrealism and black comedy.
A unique document of the surreal at work within the confines of the everyday.
Andersson creates a world that's at once surreal and disturbingly familiar; absurd, yet tremendously sad.
There's really only one good idea in this movie, but the director runs with it and presents it with an unforgettable visual panache.
Easier to respect than enthuse over, Andersson's rigorous personal vision is not only distanced but distancing.
A deliciously nonsensical comedy about a city coming apart at its seams.
The stunning, dreamlike visuals will impress even those viewers who have little patience for Euro-film pretension.
Like an Ingmar Bergman movie as realized by Monty Python: It's seriously gloomy about the loss of spirituality in the world, but at the same time rudely, sometimes hilariously, absurd.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 15% 15% | The Ugly Truth |
| 98% 98% | Up |
| 36% 36% | G.I. Joe: The Rise of … |
| 52% 52% | The Taking of Pelham 1… |
| 45% 45% | Ice Age: Dawn of the D… |
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 36% 36% | Angels & Demons |
| 68% 68% | Funny People |
| 25% 25% | Four Christmases |
| 45% 45% | Shorts |
RT On Current TV
DIRECTV 358 | Comcast 107 | DISH Network 196 | More...
What’s Hot On RT
Other News
CloseSponsored Links
Around The Network
- Songs from the Second Floor at Rotten Tomatoes
Fresh Links
Featured

The director talks about puppetry perfection and his film, Fantastic Mr. Fox

AV Club looks at a beloved cult classic, Sam Raimi's Army of Darkness.

TIME offers us a closer look at the characters from the latest Twilight film.

Moviefone lists their choices for the least attractive men in Hollywood.
Promos

Get the latest Tomatometer updates on upcoming movies!



Top Critic



