<p>Swedish filmmaker Roy Andersson&#8217;s celebrated and enigmatic film <i>Songs from the Second Floor</i> his first feature film in twenty-five years won the Special Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival in 2000. The &#8220;songs&#8221; of the film&#8217;s title refer to Andersson&#8217;s artistic ruminations on the state of mankind from his office on the second floor of Studio 24 in Stockholm. The film presents a series of forty-six tableaux&#8212;long deep-focus shots with a still camera mostly in studio settings using older visual tricks such as trompe l&#8217;oeil. The tableaux showcase seemingly trivial tragicomic situations designed to provoke thoughts about existential guilt broken relationships and the failure of social institutions to treat people as human beings. <br/><br/>Lindqvist draws from interviews with Andersson and his team that provide a behind-the-scenes look at how the film was made and investigates its philosophical and artistic influences providing a nuanced reading of a film that has both befuddled and entranced its viewers. This first book-length study in English of Andersson&#8217;s work considers his aesthetic agenda and the unique methods that have become hallmarks of his filmmaking as well as his firm belief in film&#8217;s revolutionary function as social critique.</p>