Why Are Michael Haneke Films So Unsettling?

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  • Опубликовано: 28 май 2024
  • Michael Haneke is one of the most unsettling directors out there - but not for the reasons you may think. So what makes his films so uncomfortable to watch, and why does he do it?
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    Extra Credits:
    Great read on Michale Haneke by Mattias Frey:
    www.sensesofcinema.com/2010/g...
    An article on Code Unknown:
    www.newyorker.com/magazine/20...
    "Camera Shutter, Fast, A.wav" by InspectorJ (www.jshaw.co.uk) of Freesound.org
    Violin Concerto in F major, RV 293 'Autumn' - II. Adagio Molto by John Harrison is under Attribution 3.0 ShareAlike license (creativecommons.org/licenses/...) and is downloaded from musopen.org/music/
    The Reek of Madness by Ov Moi Omm | freemusicarchive.org/music/ov...
    Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
    creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    Timestamp
    0:00 Introduction
    0:52 Films
    1:37 Frustration
    2:28 Long takes & Objectivity
    3:50 Code Unknown's Sequence Shots
    6:02 Medias Res
    6:39 White Ribbon's Deception
    7:49 Subversion in Benny's Video
    9:47 GOD
    11:46 Off Screen Violence
    12:21 Expansion of Space
    14:41 Non-consumable
    15:34 On Screen Violence
    16:23 Unresolved Conflicts
    18:35 Foreshadowing
    20:15 Unsolvable
    20:42 THE GAP
    21:36 Thank You
    #MichaelHaneke
    #VideoEssay
    #Film
  • КиноКино

Комментарии • 590

  • @SpikimaMovies
    @SpikimaMovies  2 года назад +169

    Enjoy extended 30 day FREE trial of MUBI at mubi.com/spikimamovies
    Sad that I couldn't talk about every single one of his films, especially the earlier ones. What's YOUR favourite Haneke film?

    • @DebangshuChakrabarti_
      @DebangshuChakrabarti_ 2 года назад +3

      Caché

    • @renatocfrancisco
      @renatocfrancisco 2 года назад +5

      YAY, I am using Mubi, thanks Spikima.

    • @cats_shall_rise8842
      @cats_shall_rise8842 2 года назад +3

      White Ribbon. Thanks for this! he really is a genius.

    • @aavv4928
      @aavv4928 2 года назад +8

      the seventh continent, why haven't you talked about it?

    • @XanderShiller
      @XanderShiller 2 года назад

      @@aavv4928
      Obviously because he's not a geographer so.. =P
      I'll probably watch it, thanks for the suggestion. What do you like about it?

  • @MorningOnMars
    @MorningOnMars 2 года назад +1734

    I saw The Piano Teacher recently and I can simultaneously say "It was really good" and "I hated it".

    • @N0va
      @N0va 2 года назад +78

      such an intense story, really feel for the character and her performance was wild

    • @MorningOnMars
      @MorningOnMars 2 года назад +25

      @@N0va she was incredible.

    • @N0va
      @N0va 2 года назад +13

      @@MorningOnMars i think the novel it is based on won the pulitzer prize too, true genius

    • @Eamonshort1
      @Eamonshort1 2 года назад +39

      Thats how I feel about alot of Gasper Noe

    • @galsexe
      @galsexe 2 года назад +14

      @@Eamonshort1 Irreversible is truly a unsettling masterpiece.

  • @harveydean7952
    @harveydean7952 2 года назад +2919

    Amour for me is possibly the most terrifying film I've ever seen. Most of us can watch a film where a serial killer stalks his victims or a scary monster pounces out of the shadows and ultimately feel quite safe knowing its unlikely we'll suffer a similar fate. There's no such comfort with Amour. It grabs you by the collar, shakes you vigorously and lets you know in no uncertain terms, you will get old, your body will fail you, your mind will decay and to all intents and purposes your eventual passing will be inconsequential to the world around you. Its a masterful piece of film-making, albeit one that will bum you out forever.

    • @ianbeach23
      @ianbeach23 2 года назад +91

      But what is the point? To my mind, it’s pretentious, pessimistic drivel that portrays itself as being a profound masterpiece for telling us obvious shit that we already know, in a story that is infinitely more boring than it is necessarily depressing. Synecdoche New York does the same thing but is so, so much more creative and entertaining in how it communicates it’s ideas to you than Amour is. Pointing out harsh facts of life is not intellectual or profound. It’s just bleak for the sake of bleak. Haneke has nothing to actually say about life, his movies are no higher art than those standard blockbuster horror movies you mentioned. It’s just scaring people for the sake of it, but he has nothing actually worth saying in regards to the effect his movies should have on you. You learn nothing from them, other than that life is shit I suppose. And I like filmmakers who deal in bleak or even pessimistic subject matter. I already mentioned Kaufman. And Ingmar Bergman is my favorite director. But those are also real artists with a lot to say about the world. Haneke has never given me anything in terms of actual texture. His movies are empty, nothing more than existential horror films designed to frighten you, rather than present you with any actual real ideas on the world at large. Nothing profound to say. A complete waste of time to my mind. If you like his movies more power to you, but I cannot stand them.

    • @chocolaterottenheresy5229
      @chocolaterottenheresy5229 2 года назад +117

      @@ianbeach23 When I first saw your comment, I was inclined to agree, because in my opinion there are some directors that seem self centered in their misery and only want to drag others down/shock them with their work, and ultimately have no artistic value.
      After watching this movie in particular, I think that it did have a lot to say. I don't really have much experience with aging or the elderly and what they go through, and to me it was really interesting to actually be able to see into the life of someone else like this. I think it's important to show the stories of people who suffer, rather than keep it in the shadows. Everyone, including the main character herself, struggled to grasp the reality of this situation that seemed to have completely blindsided them. Not only does it depict this suffering that people would rather not think about, but also how people who aren't suffering don't exactly help the situation. It's making me reflect on how we treat the elderly, the sick and disabled. How I am treated as a disabled person and how I act within my own relationships. It's things that I personally struggle to think about and watching this film really helped me out in that, even though it's "obvious shit we already know", we really dont see the full reality of it, and in thinking we already know everything there is to know about someone else's struggles, that might even become our own one day, we never grow.
      I also think that we shouldnt discourage or criticize art simply for not being "creative" enough as something like Synecdoche is really not consumable to a general audience(although i do like the film myself.)

    • @ianbeach23
      @ianbeach23 2 года назад +22

      @@chocolaterottenheresy5229 i can respect your view point, even though I still don’t necessarily agree. Maybe I’ll have to watch it again some day but I saw the movie as more of a commentary on love than aging, hence the name. I interpreted it as Haneke essentially saying “whoever you love you will eventually lose and that’s just the reality of it” basically saying that love is pointless in the process. I also still find his style to be more boring than it is disturbing. As far as comparing it to Synecdoche New York. I don’t hold every movie up to the same standard as a movie like that. Why I compared the two however is because Amour won the Palme d’or and it’s fans seem to usually think of it as a masterpiece. So it wasn’t me comparing it to the standard of Synecdoche New York alone, more that if we’re gonna call this movie a masterpiece, let’s compare it to another masterpiece and look at just how much better it is than this
      But like I said, I respect your viewpoint, even though I don’t think I’ll ever be a particular fan of Michael Haneke. Im glad you can get something out of his movies.

    • @chocolaterottenheresy5229
      @chocolaterottenheresy5229 2 года назад +32

      @@ianbeach23 In my opinion, I dont think that it was saying that love is pointless at all, and I'm not sure how you would come to that conclusion just because of the loss and sadness of the plot. Would you say that if this was a real story rather than a movie, that everyone's love was pointless? I'm not sure I get this point

    • @ianbeach23
      @ianbeach23 2 года назад +12

      @@chocolaterottenheresy5229 hey sorry i never saw this response. I saw it as essentially nihilism. Haneke was saying we all get old and eventually die and so there’s no point to anything. And using that nihilism as a commentary on Love specifically. Cinema tends to portray love in an overly glossy and false light, showing it to be something much more perfect than it actually is. So I saw Haneke as essentially trying to twist the common perspective film has on love by showing us the “more accurate” I say with very large quotation marks around it, and honest perspective of what love is. Similarly to how in Funny Games he twists the horror genre and shows us that violence in reality is actually much more disturbing and horrifying then entertainment tries to make it out to be, he was twisting the romance genre to show us the horror of how it is in reality. Sorry if I didn’t explain this very well by the way, it’s 4 a.m. for me. But Haneke has always been interested in establishing the differences between art and reality through his movies, so Amour seemed to be another example of that for me

  • @simonem5890
    @simonem5890 2 года назад +1739

    the way you ended the video brought such a big smile to my face, absolutely perfect imperfection

    • @jickay
      @jickay 2 года назад +57

      Yep I chuckled. Was thinking did the bastard just do that? Subscribed!

    • @enterthevoidIi
      @enterthevoidIi 2 года назад +20

      at first i was wth but then i was aahhhh

    • @danig.6454
      @danig.6454 2 года назад +11

      X4! I was like, crap, who's calling? No call... Did my headphones die? *sees red bar moving* oooooh you arse!

    • @AllRoundGameress
      @AllRoundGameress Год назад +4

      Just coming to say I thought another ad was playing and then the light bulb went off; it was such a beautiful ode to the director and creative

  • @Labroidas
    @Labroidas Год назад +328

    He was my sister's professor in film school. Nice to learn more about him, thank you for the video!

    • @samwilson964
      @samwilson964 Год назад +26

      Woah that's so cool!!

    • @Jimmy1982Playlists
      @Jimmy1982Playlists Год назад +30

      Was just thinking the other day how amazing it'd be to take a class from him. She's truly lucky for that opportunity!

  • @nabukuma
    @nabukuma 2 года назад +1025

    Holy shit he did the piano teacher, I know almost no one who’s seen that film except me. It was so awkward to watch, especially the scenes at her home. Didn’t realise the same guy did funny games.

    • @ep3989
      @ep3989 2 года назад +14

      Well I've seen it too so you found another one lol. I had read the book first.

    • @marianatheschizoid5912
      @marianatheschizoid5912 2 года назад +23

      Ikr! the acting is amazing, even in some of the most uncomfortable sex scenes ever. I still gotta read the book someday (couldn’t find it in English and my German is frankly terrible) and watch more of Haneke’s films.

    • @chris.hartliss
      @chris.hartliss 2 года назад +6

      @@marianatheschizoid5912 My German literally just melted away after my teens lol

    • @no_peace
      @no_peace 2 года назад +3

      It's the only one of these I've seen or heard of lol

    • @johnfromdownunder.4339
      @johnfromdownunder.4339 Год назад +1

      I'm in Sydney Australia and I saw the piano teacher when it came out and I love French films, my favourite films are not American they are like the taste of this man's films he talks about. That other film he made were I can't remember his name because I stoped watching films like ten years ago but he's a very great actor in France, and he gets videos left on his doorstep, it's kind of like David Lynchs lost highway I believe,Robert blake says he's in his room now,.and this other hanke film a arab of I assume Algeria he meets this man at his flat and he cuts his own throat and it's rather full on and I can't help now but think that it is more about the French war in Algeria and the how in the film the French man is being observed but buy what or whome we don't know, he must have done something in the past or perhaps it's random, but I do remember the end and it's his son doing something. I'm looking now at a DVD called Paris with Roman duress there is s film I like with Roman duress were he and his father another great french actor they are like landlords and kind of like gansters, and his mother is omg IV lost all my memory, I used to know her name so well because she speaks perfect English and can speak pretty perfect french as well, there is two women actresses that have the same skill, the beat that my heart skipped, .I miss films now, I love original films. I ALLways wanted to go to France but I guess I never will. Funny games was so good. I really liked the Irish film Calgary.

  • @matthewbob6966
    @matthewbob6966 2 года назад +592

    There’s such a precision to Haneke’s films, Caché is one of the most masterfully executed films I’ve ever seen. His work feels so perfect, like every single frame is a piece of a puzzle.

    • @proy2448
      @proy2448 2 года назад +3

      I am still trying to figure out the ending. Do you have any answers? I'd love to hear opinions

    • @aceboog4546
      @aceboog4546 2 года назад +1

      The Seventh Continent is his best, IMO.

    • @eliotsausage
      @eliotsausage 2 года назад +6

      @@proy2448 I’d suggest reading up on the french-algerian war, it helped me gather my thoughts quite a bit upon rewatching it

    • @howard5992
      @howard5992 2 года назад +9

      @@proy2448 the ending is intentionally open-ended. I think the closing message is something like "the damage people inflict on others has a ripple effect". It also echoes the theme of watching from a distance. I'm not sure if that's the type of feedback you were looking for but that's what I think of when I recall the conclusion.

    • @rutherfrogp.wilmington4907
      @rutherfrogp.wilmington4907 Год назад

      @@proy2448i pibe the theory that the fourth wall is being broken and the tapes are being sent by Haneke himself

  • @ReactionShot
    @ReactionShot 2 года назад +1230

    I find that as I've grown older, my tolerance or even willingness to sit through a film that does little more than disturb me, has diminished greatly...almost completely. Life is hard and disturbing enough.

    • @fredley33
      @fredley33 2 года назад +154

      I heard a quote once, don't remember where, but it was "art is meant to make the disturbed comfortable and the comfortable disturbed"

    • @ReactionShot
      @ReactionShot 2 года назад +53

      @@fredley33 That's a quote from Cesar Cruz. But it's often credited as being a Banksy quote. (which it's not).

    • @simonyricools
      @simonyricools 2 года назад +8

      I love going to the cinema to see those kinds of movies, but I rarely watch them at home.

    • @enricovankeeken1624
      @enricovankeeken1624 2 года назад +4

      *Í find listening to endless speeches of so called important people telling you its time to do something about gun control in america tiresome_*

    • @leebritnell8668
      @leebritnell8668 2 года назад +34

      I'm with you there.I try to avoid the extreme and unpleasant,spending much time watching movies from my youth(60s/70s).Hate 'torture porn',etc.

  • @ryanburke3702
    @ryanburke3702 2 года назад +385

    I wasn’t even able to finish the original funny games. While it was one of the most depraved and psychological movies I’ve ever seen, I wanted to keep watching because I was captivated by it. Eventually I wasn’t able to handle anymore of it and had to shut it off.

    • @Belenus3080
      @Belenus3080 Год назад +21

      As I’m sure you probably guessed, it doesn’t have a happy ending.
      I think the remake was an interesting experiment in exposing American audiences to European psychological thriller style. No happy endings, no cheap scares, lots of discomfort and apprehension.

    • @debrachambers1304
      @debrachambers1304 Год назад +1

      *depraved

    • @bambinaforever1402
      @bambinaforever1402 Год назад +2

      Really? U did not enjoy the awesome acting? Both german version and american version-incredible acting. Love the film. In american version all my favourite actors. Especially the mean guy. Awesome

    • @chrislandaverdedf
      @chrislandaverdedf Месяц назад

      @ryanburke3702 That means you passed Haneke's test.

    • @MFLimited
      @MFLimited 10 дней назад +1

      @@Belenus3080like ACTUAL life in America

  • @justanothermortal1373
    @justanothermortal1373 2 года назад +482

    I feel like this guy will do terrifically in making a Black Mirror episode

    • @SebaArias99
      @SebaArias99 2 года назад +16

      I read in an article that he actually want to make television series, but i don't saw more news about that):

    • @henningbackhaus6268
      @henningbackhaus6268 Год назад +39

      @@SebaArias99 There were negotiations with HBO for a dystopian series, but Haneke's vision would have been too expensive, so the project was cancelled. I'm sure the scripts are still lying around somewhere. Though Haneke officially retired from filmmaking on his 80th birthday.
      What I find even more interesting is that he once said he would love to make a western. A realistic western, though, historically accurate. It's a pity he never made that, I think we missed something.

    • @veronicaa7748
      @veronicaa7748 Год назад +5

      @@henningbackhaus6268 Is it about a man who goes back to earth or something like that? pretty sad it god cancelled.
      Wait, he is 80 now? nooooooo (atleast his last film was called "Happy end")

    • @Konoronn
      @Konoronn Год назад +7

      Black Mirror is terrible now.

    • @Jimmy1982Playlists
      @Jimmy1982Playlists Год назад +1

      @@henningbackhaus6268 Awww man, I didn't know he retired at 80... too bad! Truly amazing filmmaker. Will never forget first seeing _The White Ribbon,_ which introduced me to his work.

  • @amivicky_
    @amivicky_ 2 года назад +86

    Funny Games and Caché are both so weird but have lingered in my mind since I’ve seen them. Didn’t know they were by the same director, but it makes total sense. I should probably see the rest of his work! Thanks for the video.

  • @williamtaylor9966
    @williamtaylor9966 2 года назад +153

    Many of his films are genuinely bleak and disturbing. The ‘pacing’ often building a gnawing, creeping sense of dread and foreboding.
    ‘Funny Games’ (original version) is a hard watch and few, who I’ve recommended it to, have ‘stayed the course’ because of this.
    Apart from Haneke’s oeuvre, I’ve only felt this about some equally disturbing Belgian Films. ‘Man bites dog’ anyone?

    • @blackleague212
      @blackleague212 2 года назад

      Here is the demon dance. You shall enjoy it. Amen
      ruclips.net/video/g5bijJK5k14/видео.html

    • @Jimmy1982Playlists
      @Jimmy1982Playlists Год назад +6

      _Man Bites Dog_ is great! The comedic aspect made it relatively easy for me to sit thru - as compared to Haneke, who can truly terrify me like almost no other filmmaker.

    • @deadchatterton4978
      @deadchatterton4978 Год назад +9

      @@Jimmy1982Playlists Here in France, Man Bites Dog ("C'est arrivé près de chez vous") is considered as a funny comedy and is very very famous (everybody knows it and everybody quotes it to joke around, it is deep installed in french and belgium popular culture). It's funny that people from other countries see that as a grim movie... Actually, the first time i've seen it, I didn't understand why people saw this as a fun movie. It's actually fucking gross sometimes ! (but I love it)

    • @bambinaforever1402
      @bambinaforever1402 Год назад +1

      American version is an exact copy of the original one. What are u talking about

    • @user-ve7hn2dh8h
      @user-ve7hn2dh8h Год назад +1

      @@bambinaforever1402 he never claimed the opposite. What are you on about?

  • @maisarod
    @maisarod 2 года назад +66

    This is the prime of all of your video analysis. I'm very glad you decided to tap Haneke, he is just transcendental and cutting edge in every way and I love the fact so many people talk about his film topics in many ways. Your take on this is possibly the one I most agree with and for that I appreciate your channel so much.
    Thank you for this!

  • @skaterPeu
    @skaterPeu Год назад +5

    Spikima, I must say. I never came across a YT video that left me in such distress and left me with as many questions that I had when I clicked in it. I truly love the way that you approach Haneke's films and themes, I was able to understand a little bit more of his films through your analysis, but I love the way that, such as Haneke, you dont try to explain everything and every concept and leave to us, the viewers, a bit of a room to try to figure out this crazy and fckd up themes ourselves. Really great job and production. You and your channel are the reason that youtube still has good content. Congrats and thank you from Brasil. Cheers

  • @Haydin1117
    @Haydin1117 2 года назад +31

    Oh, that was a clever ending.

  • @alfsmith7210
    @alfsmith7210 2 года назад +80

    Haneke should definitely go down as one of the finest filmmakers in history. I could go on all day about him, but one thing I'd like to say is that I don't think there is a single filmmaker out there who treats the audience with more respect than Haneke. Superb video as always by the way bro, you nailed it.

  • @amr_12_
    @amr_12_ 4 месяца назад +3

    Benny’s Video features some of the most disturbing, bleak and hopeless scene in the history of films.
    The one where the boy’s parents talking to each other about dismembering a girl’s corpse who’d been killed by their son. The lacks of music, muted colors, and the performances works so effectively during that scene. It makes me so uncomfortable just thinking about it.

  • @popcornphilosophy1488
    @popcornphilosophy1488 2 года назад +43

    One of my favorite filmmakers of all time and easily the best video I’ve seen done on his work, thank you! 71 Fragments of Chronology of Chance has stuck in my head for over a year now, along with almost all of his films! Even his worst film imo, The Castle, is strikingly memorable!

    • @Zsemlemester99
      @Zsemlemester99 2 года назад +2

      Hey! Just wanted to say that your Instagram page rocks! Cheers! 😎

  • @satorumybeloved
    @satorumybeloved 2 года назад +8

    your videos are so well-made, can't believe you haven't reached 1M yet!

  • @WetDrainHair
    @WetDrainHair 2 года назад +43

    i have never had a film ever make me feel such a hopelessness and sickness like funny games (specifically the 1997 one) did. I was in fight or flight throughout the entire film.

  • @RCady33
    @RCady33 2 года назад +21

    Whoa, accolades for just sitting down and binging his movies...ugh, do you have PTSD now?

    • @SpikimaMovies
      @SpikimaMovies  2 года назад +12

      Had one since Lars von Trier binge anyways...:')

  • @bernacarangan
    @bernacarangan 2 года назад +19

    ok a minute in and i've decided to go and watch some more haneke films will see yall in a few months
    Edit: I forgot I even commented this lmao ---- I watched happy end, code unknown, the white ribbon, the piano teacher, and amour --- it was a very rough journey watching these because I never know what to expect and also because sometimes I couldn't really fully comprehend what was happening --- but I did really like piano teacher and amour --- those might go on my favorite movie list (I wouldn't recommend them but I did like them)

  • @giovanna1995
    @giovanna1995 2 года назад +19

    I absolutely adored this video, it’s perfectly edited and I can tell you’re passionate about the subject, which is fantastic
    (Also you’re voice is really nice too!)

  • @miketrebert7788
    @miketrebert7788 Год назад +5

    "Caché" is one of my all time favourites. However, you have to know something about the Paris Massacre of 1961. While only being mentioned in passing, it's the key underlying plot driver. France is in denial about this event, so it perfectly fits Haneke's challenging MO. He's a superlative moralist sometimes, IMHO. Perhaps seldom as overtly as in this film.

  • @CherryChase
    @CherryChase 2 года назад +89

    Been waiting for a comprehensive dive into what makes Haneke movies so unique. And I’m glad to say this was exactly what I was looking for

  • @christiananderson4909
    @christiananderson4909 2 года назад +28

    The White Ribbon is my personal favorite in his filmography.

    • @Jimmy1982Playlists
      @Jimmy1982Playlists Год назад +1

      The first Haneke film I saw, and it's still my favorite... absolutely unforgettable!

  • @keteyo7366
    @keteyo7366 Год назад +2

    *Edit: Sorry for my English.
    Loved the video.
    I was hoping you'd talk about 71 Fragments of a Chronology of Chance, the last movie from the Glaciation Trilogy. This video made me apreciate that movie even more.
    I didn't know too much about 71 Fragments of a Chronology of Chance background or Haneke's as a film director. But when the movie ended, I couldn't help but think about the ways the media tends to portray acts of violence of any scale and how inevitably dehumanizing they are. Also because the movie doesn't have a moment in which it reminds the audience that they're watching a movie, so the film has more time to reckon the spectator, the fact that the people that are participant of those events, being victims or assailants, are still humans with motivations, desires and issues that don't just come with 'the human condition'. This in the rawest way possible (which is maybe why many people don't like Haneke's films, he's straight up raw). Reminding us that outrages, like the ones that the characters have through the movie, capable of being dealt with or not, happen by chance. That maybe depressing, but is a hell of a powerful message.

  • @paso6234
    @paso6234 2 года назад +12

    one of my favourite directors of all time
    the amount of detail he puts in his movies is mind boggling
    saying that he uses the same tricks every movie doesnt do him justice at all

  • @redsol3629
    @redsol3629 2 года назад +4

    Please keep up the good work, your focus on this strange aspect of horror intrigues me.

  • @joelpetersen2480
    @joelpetersen2480 2 года назад +12

    "The White Ribbon" is a freaking masterpeice.

  • @pablovergara7338
    @pablovergara7338 Год назад +2

    God.
    I love this channel.
    I found it searching for movie references this Halloween season and I just keep watching every video

  • @TheGoddon
    @TheGoddon Год назад +7

    What never fails to piss me off is when that guy from funny games picks up a remote and rewinds his friends death.

  • @mjgfromdallas
    @mjgfromdallas 2 года назад +3

    Love that ending lol. Brilliant work my friend!

  • @Amantducafe
    @Amantducafe Год назад +7

    Never heard of this director so i think i'll make a 2023 goal to watch all his movies.

  • @aleksisuuronen5969
    @aleksisuuronen5969 Год назад +8

    The White Ribbon is my favorite of the movies for every element Haneke can create kinda spiraling together in beautiful way. I also watched Cache two times in same week even tho people might think it's boring, funny thing is that it actually does do give the mystery out there to find if you just give it a tought and Reallly good look. That's kinda the beauty of Cache, if you get hung up on what happened and think it thru and thru and thru. There is so many good ones in his chatalogue that you could go on and on but I think that Cache kinda is very much so in your face about how most of his movies are made to make you think.
    Just his first movie barely has dialogue in it but just because of the last segment that kinda explains the silence in some ways and ehat happens made his movie even be talked about because it was seen as cardinal sin to flush money from toilet and that made a lot of furthermore talk about consumerism aka the film kinda fullfilled it's purpose by making people think. I find it a bit funny that he made frame to frame replica of Funny Games with US actors just because the message in it was more so directed towards US's culture and he tought the message would translate better which is the reason he did the remake rather than selling out. I think his after that movies kinda proves that he did stick to his principles even tho he certainly got a hefty paycheck from it.
    The Piano Teacher being about loneliness and twisted relationship to her mother that created thru the years all of the.. quite far our there ways to release that repression and loneliness in her highly routined but not so normal life and the concequencess where the mind can twist with years of it. Nothing is really solved in the end but the floodgates somewhat just opened during the movie to see one kinda excistence and maybe try to explain how one can be born. I find it more fascinating than disturbing even tho I wouldn't say the latter wouldn't descripe the movie. It kinda has to for exploring the theme.
    You could go on and on about every work of his since again they Do Make You Think, which I love about Haneke.

    • @aleksisuuronen5969
      @aleksisuuronen5969 Год назад

      Just to say. If there is some same info, I wrote this before watching to not be influenced by what the analyzis says.

  • @sweco92
    @sweco92 Год назад +5

    The editing, the narrative, this video was so well-made and thank you for pronouncing _Michael Haneke_ appropriately.
    👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @mohamedsherif4096
    @mohamedsherif4096 Год назад +19

    I don't think I will ever be able to emotionally recover from the piano teacher. This shit was the most traumatizing movie I've ever watched! I've also watched caché and funny games, but the piano teacher is unparalleled in terms of the amount of disturbance it will cause you!

    • @sixteenstringjack
      @sixteenstringjack Год назад +1

      It's worse than Funny Games?! OMG I can hardly imagine. Took me years to recover from Funny Games

    • @bentrend
      @bentrend 4 месяца назад

      Seventh Continent was Haneke’s most upsetting movie to me. I’d even say by a wide margin

  • @TheLamphouseBCP
    @TheLamphouseBCP 2 года назад +17

    Michael Haneke and Gaspar Noe back to back? I've got to ask... are you okay?

    • @WISHARTfilms
      @WISHARTfilms 2 года назад

      I thought the same thing lol

    • @SpikimaMovies
      @SpikimaMovies  2 года назад +8

      I've been permanently disturbed since Lars von Trier marathon so at this point I'm just..nonexistent

    • @TheLamphouseBCP
      @TheLamphouseBCP 2 года назад +1

      @@SpikimaMovies Hahaha. You suffer for your art. Great videos!

  • @GodBless423
    @GodBless423 2 года назад +15

    You’re a Brave Man !

  • @rainepanda
    @rainepanda 2 года назад +2

    Your videos are so well thought out and produced! I learn so much. You make me understand and appreciate films from a much deeper place

  • @Tarrynmj
    @Tarrynmj 2 года назад +3

    Amazing video as always 👏🏽👏🏽

  • @_Diesel
    @_Diesel 2 года назад +3

    Your analyses are my favourite

  • @fast1nakus
    @fast1nakus 2 года назад +69

    I do appreciate his existence and understand why people like his work, but personally I hate it.
    his movies always remind me Crime and Punishment(Dostoevsky) for the same kind of misery porn feeling

    • @lenomnom
      @lenomnom 2 года назад +8

      Haha, couldn’t have said it better myself. I’ve only seen two of his movies and I was left with a sense of “it’s a great movie but I didn’t enjoy watching it a little bit” both times.

    • @samlyf101
      @samlyf101 2 года назад +24

      I mean, they're basically misery porn. Every Haneke film has been an exercise in misery, and as an audience you have to suffer with his characters. I guess it's subjective whether you're into that sort of thing or not.

    • @jakfan09
      @jakfan09 2 года назад +9

      Crime and Punishment is one of my favorite novels ever. Probably explains why I like Haneke.

    • @fast1nakus
      @fast1nakus 2 года назад +1

      @@jakfan09 I'm curious, do you channel it through like a catharsis stuff or is it like a window into a different place?

    • @jakfan09
      @jakfan09 2 года назад +2

      @@fast1nakus Both.

  • @gregv2821
    @gregv2821 11 месяцев назад +2

    I love cerebral, unusual, disturbing, and unsettling films. Thanks for this thorough and well-presented analysis. I've never seen a Haneke film. I will be sure to avoid wasting my time on a single one of them.

  • @learninghowto101
    @learninghowto101 2 года назад +12

    by how you described his works. I bet his works are really amazing and I would love to watch them but I have these attachement to these kinds of films and they linger on my mind for quite a quite and can sometimes get me stressed for thinking too much of it, so I won't probably not watch these movies no matter how intrigued I am.

    • @account7135
      @account7135 Год назад +1

      He didnt mention haneke first film (The seventh continent).definitely not for everyone.
      But it can change people's live forever

  • @simondavidsmith
    @simondavidsmith Год назад

    Fabulous video about my favourite director. Thank you.

  • @amyzanlungo556
    @amyzanlungo556 3 месяца назад

    I loved Funny Games and Haneke has come up on my radar so many times. I came to this video after watching one making comparisons to The White Ribbon and Point of Interest. Now I feel like I need to watch all of his. Also, this feels like it could be a full semester of study on his work. Great job!

  • @lowengeist
    @lowengeist 2 года назад

    Great video ! Thank you for this.

  • @calamari89
    @calamari89 2 года назад

    I was so excited them I saw that you had made a new video. These always make my day.

  • @pdzombie1906
    @pdzombie1906 2 года назад +3

    Such an underrated director, despite winning the Palm d'or twice. Great video!! Thanx!!!

  • @shane505
    @shane505 2 года назад +18

    This was great. Michael Haneke is a genius, this was really interesting.

  • @lucasclark5862
    @lucasclark5862 2 года назад +3

    So glad about this video. There’s not enough people talking about Haneke.

  • @masterzoroark6664
    @masterzoroark6664 Год назад +20

    I got to know about and saw Funny Games like.... 4-5 years ago and I still remember my personal distain stemming from anger at the injustice at the end of the movie.
    And well... getting drowned while unable to defend yourself is a form of death that is something that causes deep fear in me, that's another reason causing this movie to from time to time step rent free into my mind

  • @thomasalbert6687
    @thomasalbert6687 9 месяцев назад

    Want to commend you for avoiding the word "trope" in your---admirable as always---presentation. I can't quite put my finger on it but there is something spellbinding about your work. There are the "smarts" of course, and the evenness of the narration, a communication of dedication and an authenticity. It is not the first time I have left a video of yours feeling more calm and more settled.

  • @No-xr7vx
    @No-xr7vx 2 года назад +5

    ""the birthed agitation from the abrupt death of epiphany" is the most pretentious thing I've read this year

  • @Alexander_Mandradjiev
    @Alexander_Mandradjiev 2 года назад +25

    Really great video. Haneke is one of the greatest film makers in history of cinema and present time. Like Kubrick, Tarkovsky and Kirosawa, his work changes you and teaches us by reflecting our humanity to ourselves. Thank you for making this!

  • @lichtfilme
    @lichtfilme 2 года назад +8

    Hey, cool video!
    You left out the one I found the harshest: The Seventh Continent

  • @pippy6677
    @pippy6677 2 года назад

    Thank you for sharing your work.

  • @michaelmoonlight4484
    @michaelmoonlight4484 Год назад +3

    My all time favorite director. Many of his films are too hard to watch if your life is filled with enough disturbing content. If so, cache is a great one that is relatively easy to stomach if I remember correctly. My favorite is the english remake of funny games and least favorite is hour of the wolf

  • @deadchatterton4978
    @deadchatterton4978 Год назад +15

    Really great video but I'm quite surprised that you didn't mentioned The 7th Continent once... his first and, in my opinion, best movie... It conveys such a definitive message in such a perfect way that I always considered his others movies as kind of littles extensions from that one. 7th Continent is literally a manifest which drives the rest of his filmography. Perhaps it has never been released in your country ?

    • @krautgazer
      @krautgazer Год назад +1

      That movie is great, one of the best debut features by any director.

    • @cepho8349
      @cepho8349 5 месяцев назад

      It technically wasn't his first film. But yeah, it's excellent.

  • @katherinemaeapique5973
    @katherinemaeapique5973 2 года назад +1

    wow! nice to see your channel growing Spikima! I love your movie analysis so much!

  • @yonos007
    @yonos007 2 года назад +4

    Michael Haneke Films are So Unsettling that it even took me forever to get through your video on them.

  • @ryleyvaillancourt8178
    @ryleyvaillancourt8178 2 года назад +15

    I'm a huge fan of you're videos!

  • @thrivedru
    @thrivedru Год назад +3

    I wonder if George and Anne were his parents

  • @hill0ck666
    @hill0ck666 2 года назад

    Neat video buddy. I have seen quite a few of his flicks but some are new to me. Really good work. Got yourself a sub yo

  • @hebemariacarreira8344
    @hebemariacarreira8344 2 года назад +4

    Great essay! Haneke in one of best directors! "Elle", "Amour" "The Piano Teacher" my favourites. Superb!

    • @silentb7563
      @silentb7563 2 года назад +4

      Elle is Verhoeven not Haneke.

    • @hebemariacarreira8344
      @hebemariacarreira8344 2 года назад

      @@silentb7563 Sorry! I was wrong! 😞

    • @silentb7563
      @silentb7563 2 года назад +2

      @@hebemariacarreira8344i no harm meant . I just feel like Elle is something wildly diff in intention ,it's almost vulgar compared to Haneke's stuff .

    • @hebemariacarreira8344
      @hebemariacarreira8344 2 года назад

      @@silentb7563 Yes, of course! 👍

  • @marvinmandela95
    @marvinmandela95 2 года назад +2

    First time watching ur videos. This one made me subscribe immediately. Thank u for the content.

  • @tscarlsson
    @tscarlsson 2 года назад

    Great and insightful video!

  • @huguinho0774
    @huguinho0774 2 года назад +2

    i love everything about your videos, it is genius work

  • @lesliez6817
    @lesliez6817 2 года назад +5

    Imagine Michael Haneke watching your video right now.

  • @knowledgeable3302
    @knowledgeable3302 2 года назад +4

    I love this channel so much.

  • @Ad_Astra2023
    @Ad_Astra2023 2 года назад +1

    I didn’t know who Haneke was but I do remember Funny games well as it is one of those rare films I had to stop watching in the middle because it was too unsettling to watch. Dang, now I know who you’re talking about here.

  • @violinsinthevoid4579
    @violinsinthevoid4579 Год назад +2

    Amour, The Piano Teacher, Funny Games, and even his minor films like the Castle and 71 Fragments are so successfully unsettling. Amour is my favorite. But none of his films will destroy my sense of comfort and happiness with humanity more than Benny’s Video.

    • @dumfriesspearhead7398
      @dumfriesspearhead7398 Год назад

      I've only read a synopsis and seen reviews about it and that's enough for me.

  • @whitneybaxter3299
    @whitneybaxter3299 Год назад +9

    Funny games broke me… even though most of the violence was implied it was by far the most vicious movie ive ever seen and ive seen some dark movies. It felt like that movie hated its audience and rubbed it in our faces with the meta narrative and idk if thats a good thing. I appreciate what it was doing but at the same time i felt victimized by it and I feel like just as with a predatory animal you’ve got to respect it at a distance and stay away from it.

  • @kenkenken7789
    @kenkenken7789 2 года назад

    0:52 Thank you for doing this!!

  • @mamapegg
    @mamapegg Год назад

    I haven't heard of him. Now I know what I'm doing after work tomorrow night. Great video, btw.

  • @FuneralK9
    @FuneralK9 2 года назад +21

    Funny, I just watched funny games (2007) yesterday. Love that movie and love your content.

  • @chuknorth
    @chuknorth Год назад

    Thanks for the intro to Haneke. Have been sitting on Funny Games for a while... might watch it one day. It's unclear that Haneke's darkness is worth the indulgence of time.

  • @lichtfilme
    @lichtfilme 2 года назад +15

    In a way, Haneke and Lynch are so similar, because they view the closure of a film as the death of its impact

  • @user-th6gs1bz3j
    @user-th6gs1bz3j 2 года назад +3

    great editing on this video

  • @emma_osborne
    @emma_osborne 2 года назад

    finally have some hw to do while i listen to your vids 😩👏

  • @spitkitten
    @spitkitten 2 года назад +5

    I absolutely agree that Haneke is a tough artist to pin down in mere words (without the audience actually experiencing his films :D) -----this is pretty brilliant tho ...and brave. Respect! ---I think I'll share this vid with a buddy of mine who has Funny Games as his all-time fave movie.. he'll dig it too, I'm sure ^_^

  • @mewnater
    @mewnater 3 месяца назад +1

    benny’s video is one of my top 4 FAVORITE films ever. michael haneke is a brilliant director.

  • @suburbjorn
    @suburbjorn Год назад +1

    Michael haneke is one of my favorite directors ever… we used to joke about having a “feel good” film festival with just him and Lars Von trier movies 😂

  • @zla3031
    @zla3031 2 года назад +9

    Excellent video! Love Haneke, but have been putting off watching Amour for years.

  • @echos-myron
    @echos-myron 4 месяца назад

    The Seventh Continent is so difficult to reckon with; the darkness is all encompassing . Apparently people seeing it in the theater lost their minds when he flushes all the money down the toilet; there’s something so poignant about that. I also love his Kafka film The Castle; and the way John Zorn’s music works in Funny Games. An Auteur that I have to force myself to watch his films; because that’s why he made them.

  • @pdippyl3398
    @pdippyl3398 2 года назад +3

    Great video ! An analysis of Lars von trier’s dogville would be so fucking good

    • @SpikimaMovies
      @SpikimaMovies  2 года назад +2

      Not Dogville exactly, but I do have a vid on Lars von Trier if you're interested ;)

  • @anothermoon8894
    @anothermoon8894 Год назад +1

    Amazing video! Thank you! I'm Austrian and I love Haneke's movies. He influenced the Austrian way of movie making tremendously and I highly recommend to watch the movies of Ulrich Seidl as well, if your are interested in more Austrian movies. Seidl as well without a filter shows what Austrian's shamefully hide. Austrians really have their own particular way of filming (and although I love my German neighbours but they could NEVER be on the same level as Austrian movies).

    • @cepho8349
      @cepho8349 3 месяца назад

      There are many fantastic German movies as well. But I agree that Austrian cinema is great and seems to be punching above its weight.

  • @anamia9905
    @anamia9905 Год назад +1

    This is an amazing video essay, keep doing what you do

  • @comicsguru2574
    @comicsguru2574 Год назад

    Terrific work.

  • @DavidFamous
    @DavidFamous Год назад +3

    Fantastic visual break down, I learned alot watching this, and that ending was 👌🏾

  • @justincase5002
    @justincase5002 Год назад +1

    Why am i watching this? I didn't know Michael Haneke existed, am not familiar with any of his films. RUclips, i'm severely disappointed.

  • @NaumRusomarov
    @NaumRusomarov Год назад

    superb.

  • @hansmatoscamac7109
    @hansmatoscamac7109 2 года назад +1

    That ending! Such a Hanekian detail.

  • @tsunchoo
    @tsunchoo 2 года назад +3

    Don't watch Funny Games, it's horrible and you won't be better off afterwards.

  • @jeiangardoceagtas6524
    @jeiangardoceagtas6524 2 года назад +4

    I wish I can explain films like this. Its extraordinary.

    • @sunshinef263y
      @sunshinef263y Год назад

      You probably can You just don't think you can rn.

  • @juannaym8488
    @juannaym8488 2 года назад +2

    I don't think Haneke's movies hit me as hard because I grew up and was socialized in Vienna, a few Kilometers from where Haneke grew up, where he himself got socialized and where he created a lot of his movies. Whilst what he does in his films seems foreign and terrifying to foreigners, it's simply how life is portrayed and seen here in Austria

    • @veronicaa7748
      @veronicaa7748 Год назад +4

      Haneke once asked by women after attending his first film and said ; "Is Austria really that depressing?"
      I guess he isn't lying

    • @megaultradamn
      @megaultradamn Год назад

      May I ask why Austria is so depressing?

    • @juannaym8488
      @juannaym8488 Год назад

      @@megaultradamn it just... Is. Idk. The people just fucking life here

  • @s0.5554
    @s0.5554 5 месяцев назад

    What song did you put when “michael haneke” text?? I'm very desperate, I've tried to find the soundtrack of Benny's video for example, and I can't find it, it's very difficult to find the songs that Haneke uses in his movies :(

  • @klientproby
    @klientproby 2 года назад +16

    Thank you for the review and analyses of this film director. This is why I avoid such films because I don't find them particularly enjoyable or enlightening. These kinds of films are, imo, excellent for film courses/film school, but I find them annoying and tiresome. Seeing one or two might be alright, but after that......Obv this director isn't for everybody. I find it interesting that a lot of the films seem to make frequent use of children, which I like, and the violence isn't limited to male on female, which is refreshing.

  • @butth3ad
    @butth3ad 2 года назад

    been watching a few Haneke films in one of my classes and this just popped up in my recommended so I had to click glad i did