Anyway, Film Comment has a long article on his latest film. It disses one of my favourite contemporary film maker on its way to lionize Haneke (Lars von Trier makes "political cartoons"!). Nevertheless, it is a good summary of his career so far and tries to place his latest film in the context of recent political developments in the west.
Since his first theatrical feature in 1989, The Seventh Continent, German-born Michael Haneke has dispensed post-9/11 visions of violent, benumbed swatches of middle-class society on the brink of dissolution. Four years and numerous debacles after the onset of our apocalyptic era, it is increasingly clear that in our headsÂas, for the most part, comfortable, educated, anxious urbanites who also constitute the prime audience for Euro art cinema we inhabit the same unremittingly bleak, paranoid landscape within which Haneke conducts his nasty business. It is a place we would call home only under duress. Hidden (Cache), his latest and arguably most accomplished provocation, revolves around central characters and a plot predicament that despite being set in an unnamed French city feels terrifyingly familiar. That's the operative word, terrifying.
The whole article here.
A good account of Haneke's career and his past films can be found here. Senses of Cinema profile here.
dang, mr mortensen is mesmerizing in a history of violence..
ReplyDeleteYeah he was. But I thought the second half slacked mostly because Mortensen wasn't able to reveal the "dark" side of his character very well. He looked like a hero in a conventional action film which the film was evidently not.
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