To qualify for the “Group of 7”, where world leaders discuss global economic policy and major international problems, you must be one of the seven richest capitalist nations on the planet (at the moment the line-up is Great Britain, France, Italy, Germany, USA, Japan and Canada).
There’s no doubt that getting seven incredibly powerful and busy leaders to sit together and talk is a significant geopolitical occurrence, but 50 years on from the its inauguration, it’s clear the group has failed to meaningfully address issues like climate change and world hunger.
Rumours, the absurd fantasia from bonafide Canadian weirdos Guy Maddin, Galen Johnson and Evan Johnson is set during a fictional G7 summit. Stuffy statesmen and women descend into panic and derangement when a fantastical apocalypse isolates them from their staff. It illustrates how self-serving the ruling class can be, while they preach unity and democracy.
Get the latest news and insight into how the Big Issue magazine is made by signing up for the Inside Big Issue newsletter
The starry, international cast includes major talents like Cate Blanchett playing the chancellor of Germany and Charles Dance as America’s senile president, with Nikki Amuka-Bird as the prime minister of Britain and Denis Ménochet as the French prime minister, who turns into a babbling cryptologist trying to decode the strange, fantastical occurrences as symbolic mirrors of their shared geopolitical history. (This feels like a hint that interpreting the plot as direct political commentary is a waste of time.)
Rumours is not political in a partisan sense, but it does satirise the gulf between the existential danger to our planet and how out of touch our powerful protectors can be.