NEW YORK — You'd be hard pressed to find an upcoming film weirder than ''Rumours.''
The biting commentary on the emptiness of political statements and the performances politicians put on starts off as a straight political satire focusing on the G7 world leaders, but then slips into a world of slow-yet-terrifying zombies; a mysterious, giant brain found in the middle of a forest with unexplained origins; and an AI chatbot bent on sexual entrapment.
It goes from provocative to absurd within a few short scenes, with the G7 leaders no longer the subject of criticism, but the butt of the joke.
And that's kind of the whole point, according to its star and executive producer, Cate Blanchett.
''We're all in such a state of heightened anxiety and fear with what's going on with climate, what's going on with the global political situation. We feel like we're on the precipice of a world war and there's a lot of people in positions of power who seem to be relishing that moment,'' Blanchett told The Associated Press.
She plays a fictional chancellor of Germany named Hilda Orlmann, the host of the conference who's more focused on optics than action.
''I think the audience will come to it with a need for some kind of catharsis. And because the film is ridiculous and terrifying ... I think they'll be able to laugh at the absurdity of the situation we found ourselves in. I think it's a very generous film in that way,'' she said.
The three directors, Guy Maddin and brothers Evan and Galen Johnson, said they wanted the film to feel like it had a ''generic wash of political disrespect'' and to include some resonant critiques, but they didn't want viewers to feel like they were leaving a lecture hall as they walked out of the theater.