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Satire’s Funny Like That

Laughing at history, not with it: on Armando Iannucci’s The Death of Stalin and the current state of satire

In the March/April issue of Film Comment, Lauren Kaminsky wrote a feature about Armando Iannucci’s The Death of Stalin: “[The film is] a delirious historical mash-up that compiles sometimes independently factual details in utterly counterfactual ways. It can therefore convey nothing about causation and is largely apolitical, but it is a spot-on satire of socialist realism and the authoritarian political culture of high Stalinism.” In our digital age, the prominence of news satire and satirical news has helped make politics more immediate—Iannucci being a prime mover through work like In the Loop and Veep—but the intermingling of humor and facts brings its own complications. FC Digital Producer Violet Lucca spoke with Kaminsky, a professor at Harvard University, about the Russian humor this film employs, within the context of Anglo-American satire of political events today.

This story is part of the March-April 2018 issue of Film Comment.

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