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11/23/2014

Hidden/Caché (2005) - Haneke's slick, cold surveillance drama-thriller



+ Best French Film of the Year + Best Mystery of the Year


Spanish poster for Michael Haneke's Hidden


QUICK REVIEW:

A married parental couple who work in the creative industry start to receive videotapes with recordings of their own house as well as ominous drawings in the mail. The man (Daniel Auteuil (Conversations With My Gardner/Dialogue Avec Mon Jardinier (2007)) believes that they may come from a brother, he once never had ...

Caché is a drama thriller written and directed by Austrian film master Michael Haneke (The White Ribbon/Das Weiße Band - Eine Deutsche Kindergeschichte (2009)).
My sympathy for the leading couple in this film reaches a limit at some point, because they are so awfully 'intellectual', pathetic and ridiculous. The film is told in a starkly realistic style without a score even, and the many emotions going through the main characters are quite palpable, and work to heighten the tension. The film also has SPOILER one of the most shocking suicide scenes that has ever been put on film.
The couple, who is the core of Caché, are pretty much lost throughout the film, and thus Caché itself also gets to feel somewhat lost in my eyes.
Still, it is a smart and sleek European co-production, if not among Haneke's best.
At the moment, he is in preproduction with a film that is set to come out next year with the title Flashmob.

Related posts:

Michael Haneke: Amour (2012) - Tender love, unseizing death in Haneke's pictures

2005 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I] 




Watch the trailer with English subtitles here

Cost: 10.5 mil. $
Box office: 16.1 mil. $
= Flop
[Caché was most successful in Europe, which is common for Haneke's mostly very European films, here about French intellectuals. It has won a slew of awards; chief among them, 3 at Cannes, including Best Director. It did make 3.6 mil. $ in the US, which isn't bad for a thriller as minimalistic as Caché, but with its relatively high cost, it didn't sell enough to start turning profits.]

What do you think of Caché?
If you think it is a masterpiece, please, tell us why

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