Happy End Review: Michael Haneke Returns With Another Feel-Bad Drama - 27reservation

Ads 720 x 90

Happy End Review: Michael Haneke Returns With Another Feel-Bad Drama


Austrian writer-director Michael Haneke has made many a masterpiece and his latest, Happy End, isnt one of them. Yet this cinematic poke in the eye about an upper class family imploding still exerts a perverse fascination. From early provocations like The Seventh Continent (1989) through later boundary-pushing works like The Piano Teacher, Cache, The White Ribbon, Funny Games (both the original and its English-language remake) and Amour,the fillmaker specializes in the toxic indifference that can kill a family or society as a whole. He offers no easy answers. As the man himself once said: My films are intended as polemical statements against the American barrel down cinema and its dis-empowerment of the spectator. They are an appeal for a cinema of insistent questions instead of false (because too quick) answers, for clarifying distance in place of violating closeness, for provocation and dialogue instead of consumption and consensus.

I include that statement just so strangers to Hanekes world view know what theyre in for. The Laurents, the family under the microscope in Happy End, hide in the bubble of its own privilege and live in a mansion in the French coastal city of Calais. Georges, played by the reliably brilliant Jean-Louis Trintignant, is about to turn 85; since the passing of his wife, hes in love only with death. (In many ways, this ironically titled drama could be the sequel to Amour.) The widower is trapped with whats left of his family: his daughter Anne (Isabelle Huppert), who runs the clans construction business; her immature son, Pierre (Franz Rogowski), who shed like to see take over operations; Annes brother, Thomas (Mathieu Kassovitz), a doctor; his wife, Anas (Laura Verlinden) and their newborn son; and ve (a dynamite Fantine Harduin), Thomass 13-year-old daughter from a previous marriage, who comes to live at chez Laurent after the suicide of her mother.

25 Reasons to Love the Movies in 2017Phil Anselmo Remembers Dimebag Darrell: 'I Think of Him Every Day''A Charlie Brown Christmas': The Making of a Classic Soundtrack

Its hardly a picture of domestic tranquility, and things get worse when the family business takes a hit. A wall collapses at one of their construction sites, injuring an employee and opening up the family to lawsuits. Annes lover and English lawyer, Lawrence (Toby Jones) steps in to help. But theres security footage of the construction accident that tells its own story. Haneke devotees already know the filmmakers infamous disdain of cyberspace, surveillance footage and smartphone snooping in the service of killing privacy. An image of a cell phone opens the film and the viewer watches along with Eva as her camera spies on Anne undressing for bed and offers snide commentary. Her fathers Skype interludes with his mistress also dont escape Eves scrutiny. And in one troubling exchange between the young woman, who may be a danger to her baby brother, and Georges, who fails to die even after crashing his car into a tree, the film takes on living in the past and the present as equally futile gestures. Trintignant and Harduin play the scene with a chilling detachment that cuts to the bone.

And yet the family perseveres, ignoring any human casualties that might interfere with its routine and turning a blind eye to the African immigrants, many undocumented, who live outside their locked door. Haneke jumps from one scene to another with no regard for time, space or clarity. Happy End is a puzzle and its our job to connect the pieces. If it doesnt drive you crazy first, youll find yourself maddened and mesmerized to the bitter end.

Related Posts

Posting Komentar

Subscribe Our Newsletter