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  1. You, the Living (Swedish: Du levande) is a 2007 Swedish black comedy-drama film written and directed by Roy Andersson. The film is an exploration of the "grandeur of existence", [3] centered on the lives of a group of individuals, such as an overweight woman, a disgruntled psychiatrist, a heartbroken groupie, a carpenter, a business consultant ...

  2. Sep 21, 2007 · You, the Living: Directed by Roy Andersson. With Elisabeth Helander, Jörgen Nohall, Jan Wikbladh, Björn Englund. You, the Living is a film about humankind, its greatness and its baseness, joy and sorrow, its self-confidence and anxiety, its desire to love and be loved.

    • (16K)
    • Comedy, Drama, Music
    • Roy Andersson
    • 2007-09-21
  3. May 24, 2007 · You, the Living (2007) Based on the Old Norse proverb "Man is man's delight," taken from the medieval poem Hávamál, the second chapter of Roy Andersson’s “human trilogy” is a tragicomic exploration of the grandeur of existence.

    • 94 min
    • 2002
    • slojinksi2
  4. Mar 26, 2021 · Like the previous film before it, You, The Living presents a grim but beautiful exploration of humanity through snapshots of ordinary city life in Sweden. Incredibly foreign and bizarre in presentation, but still deeply familiar and personal, Roys Andersson succeeds again at tying together slice of life filmmaking with something very theatrical ...

  5. Aug 19, 2009 · Andersson’s “You, the Living” is hypnotic. Drab, weary people slog through another depressing day in a world without any bright colors. A bitter alcoholic woman sits on a park bench hatefully insulting a fat, meek man, screams that she will never see him again, finds out there’s veal roast for dinner, and says she may drop by later.

  6. You, the Living. Composed of humorous sketches of human behavior, Roy Andersson's You, the Living is an eccentric but highly entertaining and unforgettable work. In the Swedish...

    • (43)
    • Drama
  7. Apr 22, 2020 · You, the Living is Roy Andersson’s second in a trilogy that starts with 2000’s Songs From the Second Floor and concludes with 2013’s A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence.