Metacritic Film

Songs from the Second Floor

Starring Lars Nordh, Stefan Larsson, Bengt C.W. Carlsson, Torbjörn Fahlström, Sten Andersson, Rolando Núñez, Lucio Vucina, and Per Jörnelius

MPAA RATING: Not Rated

New Yorker Films
Drama
98 minutes | Color
Denmark / Norway / Sweden
Released In Theaters July 3, 2002

Composed of a series of immaculately staged tableaux, Songs From the Second Floor is a stylized black comedy-turned-nightmare. (Film Forum)

WRITTEN BY
Roy Andersson

DIRECTED BY
Roy Andersson

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

74 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 Chicago Sun-Times
A collision at the intersection of farce and tragedy--the apocalypse as a joke on us.
100 Christian Science Monitor
In place of a conventional plot, this utterly unique Swedish movie offers a series of related episodes -- Some are funny, some are tragic, all are dreamlike and unpredictable, suggesting that the 21st century will be a lot weirder and wackier than we expect.
90 Washington Post
Want to see something strange, funny, twisted, brilliant and macabre? Sure you do.
88 Chicago Tribune
A brilliant, absurd collection of vignettes that, in their own idiosyncratic way, sum up the strange horror of life in the new millennium.
88 New York Daily News
"Songs" is a delight. It's a visual feast and often hilarious.
80 TV Guide
Andersson creates a world that's at once surreal and disturbingly familiar; absurd, yet tremendously sad. The haunting score is by ABBA's Benny Andersson.
80 The New York Times
A heartbreakingly thoughtful minor classic, the work of a genuine and singular artist.
80 Chicago Reader
Often seems more old-fashioned than modern.
75 New York Post
A devastating indictment of unbridled greed and materalism, made all the more relevant by the Enron and WorldCom scandals.
75 Boston Globe
The film is depressive, slow, darkly funny, unyielding in its formal rigor, and unsettlingly beautiful. It's obviously not for everyone, but only because not everyone can meet its stare.
75 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
The film is 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.
70 The Onion (A.V. Club)
Though the laughs in Songs From The Second Floor tend to stick in the throat, they're also cathartic and oddly comforting, because the world outside the movie theater is bound to look cheerier than the one on the screen.
30 Village Voice
Despite some deadpan, Jacques Tati-like orchestration and occasional sight gags, there's no real pleasure in the game -- Songs From the Second Floor is more absurd than funny.
30 Variety
Rapidly wears out its welcome after the first few reels to finish up as a perplexing objet d'art.

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