Film

Be social

  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Newsvine
  • Stumbleupon

Michael Haneke Will Be Your Mirror

Don't blame him if you don't like what you see

By SCOTT FOUNDAS
Wednesday, March 12, 2008 - 11:00 am

“Who on earth would want to see that?

Rainer Hosch

High Wattage: Haneke insisted on Naomi.

—Overheard at a Los Angeles multiplex during the trailer to Michael Haneke’s Funny Games


“That was weird, but I kind of want to see it again.”

—Overheard following the midnight premiere of Michael Haneke’s Funny Games at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival


To the uninitiated viewer, Austrian director Michael Haneke might best be described as the modern cinema’s master of the unkind rewind. In the opening scene of his second theatrical feature, Benny’s Video (1992), we see crude camcorder footage of a farm pig being shot with a cattle gun during a family’s bucolic holiday. Then the images begin to play in reverse before our eyes, then forward again, this time in slow motion, until the titular teenage videographer gets it in his head to restage this grisly scene in his own bedroom, with a female classmate in place of the swine. Thirteen years later, the opening scene of Haneke’s Caché similarly doubled back on itself, revealing that the establishing exterior shot of a Parisian book critic’s home was, in actuality, an excerpt from a surveillance video left on the critic’s doorstep by an anonymous voyeur.

The most unnerving instant replay in the Haneke canon, however, is the one that occurs late in his 1997 film Funny Games, when the distraught matriarch of a family held hostage in their lakeside vacation home by two sadistic intruders momentarily turns the tables on her captors and leaves one of them with a gaping shotgun wound in his stomach. Already, by this point in the film, the woman has watched helplessly as her husband is savagely beaten with a golf club and her 10-year-old son finds himself on the losing end of a life-or-death round of eeny-meeny-miny-moe. But mere seconds after our heroine appears to gain the upper hand, the surviving tormentor picks up a remote control and, in a moment that might be dubbed “night of the living TiVo,” resurrects his fallen partner in crime with a single touch of the backward arrow.

It is the most discussed and debated single moment in Haneke’s most discussed and debated movie — an abrupt breaking of whatever rules we thought Funny Games had established for itself, and a blunt-force denial of our desire for closure and catharsis. When the film premiered at the 1997 Cannes Film Festival, Haneke recalls, the shooting earned the enthusiastic applause of the audience. “Later, when the scene gets rewound, there was embarrassed silence, because they realized that they had applauded a murder. That’s what I have to play with as a filmmaker, so that people become aware of their roles as accomplices to the violence that they are viewing.”

As Haneke speaks, the sunlight of a crisp fall afternoon streams through the windows of his suite at New York City’s Regency Hotel and glints off his white, professorial beard. Tall and slender, with a wolfish jowl and a penchant for dressing head to toe in various shades of black, the 65-year-old filmmaker cuts an undeniably imposing figure, which, coupled with the bleak tone of his films, has led to his reputation as a chilly prince of cinematic darkness. In person, though, Haneke’s formidable demeanor is offset by kind, fatherly eyes and a convulsive, deep-throated laugh that rises up at unexpected intervals. He is quick to offer praise for his filmmaking contemporaries. (Of the Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami, he says, “He is, in my opinion, the most important, the most advanced film director in the world today.”) Perhaps most disarming is his habit of peppering his conversation with German proverbs, some of which survive the translation into English better than others. “There is a saying in German, ‘Wash my pelt, but don’t get me wet,’ ” Haneke tells me when I raise the fact that many audiences prefer movies to be a little less aggressive than his. A few days later, during a workshop at Boston University, he has these words for a student who asks him why he’s never made a children’s film or a comedy: “There is a saying in German, ‘Don’t ask a shoemaker for a hat.’ ”

The purpose of Haneke’s visit to the U.S. is twofold. One reason is a complete retrospective of his films at the Museum of Modern Art and the Harvard Film Archive. The other is the promotion of Funny Games — not the decade-old Austrian film mentioned above, but rather an American remake starring Naomi Watts and Tim Roth that marks Haneke’s first foray into English-language cinema. It has already entered the film-history textbooks as the first time a director has remade his own film shot by shot, with only the subtlest of variations in dialogue, costumes and production design. For its creator, it is an unexpected career move that has raised its share of eyebrows on both sides of the Atlantic ever since it was first announced two years ago. Why would Haneke, on the heels of Caché — his greatest international success to date (including nearly $4 million at the U.S. box office) — opt to revisit one of his own films, in a language in which he is less than fluent, in a place (Hollywood) famous for sending many a world-cinema maverick running home with his tail between his legs?


To hear Haneke tell it, his rationale was quite simple. From its English-language title to the architectural details of its setting, even the original Funny Games was intended, he says coyly, “for the consumers of violence — in other words, Americans. The house in the first film — such a house doesn’t even exist in Austria. It’s a typical American suburban house.” Just as the NASCAR racing that plays on a television in the background of one of the grisliest scenes in both versions of the film is a uniquely American pastime. (Asked why he chose the sport, Haneke says it was the loudest thing he could think of.)

But in our globalized entertainment marketplace, I ask Haneke, isn’t the entire world a consumer of violence? “Yes, yes, of course,” he replies, “but it’s the English language that is the language of the world. If you want to reach as large an audience as possible, you have to make an English-language film. It’s sad, but it’s the truth.”

 
Comments

No comments

All Hopped Up at The New Father's Office

By Jonathan Gold

Sang Yoon's latest is bigger and probably better than the original. But can you get a seat?

Fried Chicken Wonderland

By Jonathan Gold

Northeast LA: The golden triangle

Behind the Scenes at the Sundance Labs

By ELLA TAYLOR

Building a better screenwriter

Speed Racer On the Fast Track to Nowhere

By J. HOBERMAN

Anime on overdrive from the Wachowski brothers

Brix @ 1601: The Newest Home of Rock-Star Sommelier Caitlin Stansbury

By Jonathan Gold

Plus food from former Hollywood Roosevelt chef Michael McDonald ... wined and dined in Hermosa Beach

Bad Rap: How Aspiring Hip-hop Star Herbie Gonzalez Got Pegged as a Manhattan Beach Murderer (163)

By PAUL TEETOR
Wed, Apr 9, 3:50 pm

Anatomy of a false confession

Have Movie Stereotypes Returned? (30)

By STEVEN MIKULAN
Wed, Apr 23, 11:59 am

Back in black (and yellow) face

Doomscraper? Here Comes Hollywood's First-Ever Mega-Skyscraper (11)

By PATRICK RANGE MCDONALD
Wed, Apr 30, 4:30 pm

A community thrown into shadow and vistas of the Hollywood sign could be destroyed

Billboards Gone Wild: 4,000 Illegal Billboards Choke L.A.'s Neighborhoods (11)

By CHRISTINE PELISEK
Wed, Apr 23, 6:00 pm

Is City Hall corrupt, or just inept?

Griddle Me This (7)

By Jonathan Gold
Wed, Mar 25, 1998, 12:00 am

Japanese pizza in Torrance

Behind the Scenes at the Sundance Labs

By ELLA TAYLOR
Wed, May 7, 12:00 pm

Building a better screenwriter

Speed Racer On the Fast Track to Nowhere

By J. HOBERMAN
Wed, May 7, 4:56 pm

Anime on overdrive from the Wachowski brothers

Jon Favreau's Iron Man Has a Heart

By SCOTT FOUNDAS
Wed, Apr 30, 3:00 pm

Director and Robert Downey Jr. bring soul to the superhero movie

Movie Reviews: The Fall, I for India, Mister Lonely

By LA Weekly Film Critics
Wed, May 7, 4:53 pm

And other May 9 releases

Mister Lonely, Harmony Korine's Way

By JOSHUAH BEARMAN
Wed, May 7, 4:55 pm

The director on flying nuns and his Mexican Michael Jackson

• Advertisement •

Blogs

Nikki Finke's Deadline Hollywood Daily

Primetime Pilot Panic: CBS 'Unit' Probably
Sun, May 11, 5:15 pm

LA Daily

Narco war update: El Chapo's son goes down
Sun, May 11, 4:04 pm

Play

The Kidz In the Hall Demonstrate the Power of A Good Rolodex
Fri, May 9, 4:00 pm

Catch of the Day

Record turnout
Fri, May 9, 7:34 am

Style Council

The Kids In the 'Secret Show' Hall
Thu, May 8, 9:41 am

Slideshows

JIm Howser Mere Inches Solo Show

At Merry Karnowsky Gallery

Cute Overload at the Family Pet Expo

Kittens, puppies, ducks and all sorts of

Speed Racer On the Fast Track to Nowhere

By J. HOBERMAN
Wed, May 7, 4:56 pm

Anime on overdrive from the Wachowski brothers

Mister Lonely, Harmony Korine's Way

By JOSHUAH BEARMAN
Wed, May 7, 4:55 pm

The director on flying nuns and his Mexican Michael Jackson

Harmony Korine's Singular and Sincere Mister Lonely

By Jim Ridley
Wed, May 7, 3:54 pm

Finding Neverland

Behind the Scenes at the Sundance Labs

By ELLA TAYLOR
Wed, May 7, 12:00 pm

Building a better screenwriter

Jon Favreau's Iron Man Has a Heart

By SCOTT FOUNDAS
Wed, Apr 30, 3:00 pm

Director and Robert Downey Jr. bring soul to the superhero movie

Jon Favreau's Iron Man Has a Heart

Wed, Apr 30, 3:00 pm

Director and Robert Downey Jr. bring soul to the superhero movie

UCLA's Manoel de Oliveira Retrospective Enters Final Week

Wed, Apr 23, 12:58 pm

99-year-old Portuguese director translates the mystery

Intrigue and more at City of Lights, City of Angels

Wed, Apr 16, 1:17 pm

Secrets and Spies

The Visitor: The New McCarthyism

Wed, Apr 9, 3:20 pm

Different faces, same condescension from Station Agent director

Bons Away! City of Lights, City of Angels

Wed, Apr 9, 3:18 pm

French-film festival delivers the goods

LA Weekly Promotions

Education Guide

From online learning to 4-year colleges, LA Weekly's Education Guide '08 has answers to all your education questions.

Opportunity Rocks Career Fair

Be the first to hear about the latest career opportunities. Click here to find your dream job!

Little Sexy Black Book

Bring sexy back with LA Weekly's guide to the sexiest spots in Los Angeles.

Living Quarters

Get the real story on LA real estate. Whether you're a renter, a buyer or a seller, Living Quarters is your guide to LA living.

Blank Blankly

Speak Freely at LA Weekly with your own Blank Blankly slogan. Consider Thoroughly, then Create Adverbially only at LA Weekly.

Career Guide

Jumpstart your career with the LA Weekly Career Guide. All the info you need to take the next step in life.

Digital Jukebox

Be. Hear. Now. Listen to the hottest bands and stay on the leading edge of LA's music scene with free streaming music from LA Weekly.

Hook Me Up

Want FREE stuff? Sign up for this week's contests and get the hook-up from LA Weekly.

Insiders

Get Inside with LA Weekly. LA Weekly Insiders has the what to do and where to go in LA. Sign up and we'll deliver Insiders right to your inbox!

LA to Vegas

What happens there starts here. LA to Vegas is your guide to living it up in Sin City.

Jonathan Gold Text Alerts

Get Jonathan Gold's restaurant picks sent right to your phone and never miss another great meal!

Restaurant Gallery

Hungry? Check out LA Weekly's Restaurant Gallery advertorial for the best grub in LA.
Backpage.com