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The Michael Haneke Collection [DVD]
 
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The Michael Haneke Collection [DVD]

Daniel Auteuil , Juliette Binoche , Michael Haneke    Suitable for 18 years and over   DVD
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Actors: Daniel Auteuil, Juliette Binoche, Isabelle Huppert, Beatrice Dalle
  • Directors: Michael Haneke
  • Format: PAL
  • Language French
  • Subtitles: English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 4
  • Classification: 18
  • Studio: Artificial Eye
  • DVD Release Date: 9 Oct 2006
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B000HN32Q4
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 13,286 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

DVD Description

Features 'Hidden', 'Time of the Wolf', 'Code Unknown' and 'The Piano Teacher'


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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
THE KILLER QUARTET 23 July 2008
By usman
Format:DVD
4 great movies in one case with extras including intrviews ,award functions and featurettes -unmissable;

1.Code Unknown-Haneke always works in triads or so i perceive,here we are introduced directly to the concept of communication or the rather lack of it in the form of a class of deaf -mute kids trying to reach out to each other,but then it assumes a dramatic parody in an intelligent mode on the contemporary european culture of melting pots ,what we see are real people like us -familiar themes though ugly and unwanted but happenning in our midst,juxtaposed on media images from Kosovo and Kabul.

This then becomes both a mockery of human values as they are in their unjust,poetic licence as well as a satire on race and behaviour.

The central scene is played as 'Hamidi'-a french white youth tosses waste paper into the lap of a Romanian beggar, 'Amadou'-a muslim youth from Mali[an African music teacher]chides and confronts him-with Binoche intervening to stop the fight ,the travesty ensues as law enforcers arrive and arrests the [roma]beggar woman and the African moralist who wants Hamidi to apologise to the beggar woman .

This then gives mr.Haneke a solid reason to divulge into the lives of the chic French actress ,the Muslim black youth and the Romanian woman .

we see the cesspool modern Europe has become with sullied human rights strewn all over where victims become aggressors and perpetrators win in distorted truth .

Neuvic is Binoch's boyfriend ,their real -life argument in a super-market is a delight to watch ,Binoche being harassed on the Metro by a disgruntled white hating Arab boy is horrific with no one but a middle aged Arab man intervening ,Neuvic covering his story in Kosovo and Kabul become more expansive to take us into the conflict zones of human massacres.

But the victory belongs to Haneke as he brings about the amalgamation of multiple cultures ,behaviours and prejudices in a moral story which explores whether justice is still an honorourable code in our social milieu .

Unfortunately for all of us except the totally naive the answer is unkown as mentioned in the title.

the music with the martial drumming ,the walk on boulevard St.Germain and the metro ride are captured by the camera in the most creatively captivating manner possible and the tale of mis-communication and social bigotry in today's tenchnically enlightened and 'human right' concious society becomes a masterwork on present day human behaviour in everyday life .

A code you all need to explore to divulge into your own truth -haneke is indeed a wise man or even a genius .

2.TIME OF WOLF-

The lush greens of the luscious French rural landscape are poised with the bonfires of the survivors who have escaped an unknown 'apocalaypse' which might represent our pointless existence and still it brings optimism to the human dregs gathered in a train station awaiting food supplies and administering a rough living order to survive in a manner reminiscent of the true 'law of the jungle'.

The initial murder of an innocent 'family man', that is never brought to justice, as a word of mouth accusation by his family is unaccepted by all,is just as critical in analogy of the present mass murders prevalent globally and show human life as of no value .

The dependants of the murdered man are still shown as compassionate and caring who are humane as the bereaving widow[Isabella Huppert]who is protecting her son and daughter in a arhetype matriarchal role,tries to help others too despite her misfortunes .
The young daughter is writing letters to her murdered father and seeking an ally in a forlorn boy, who is a loner and a drifter,and the 'symbolic rebel' who lives as an outcast by himself ,in a self defense tactic shunning the rest of this ramshackle community .

The 'ruling elite' are the gunmen as anyone who has a weapon is right whether moral or unjust ,as they wield the law in it's exigent frail disastrous social failure by being the custodians of justice .

The young son is a sensitive soul who is tortured by this whole catastrophe and wants to offer himself as a 'pagan sacrifice'in hope to bring world back to order and stop the sufferring .

The movie is shot outdoors in fascinating forest lands with trees and vegetation almost coming to life in a dark atmosphere with 'burning bonfires'where the survivors huddle , and Nature itself is shown in it's most potent self,as the ultimate survivor .

The only music is Beethoven's Sonata played in one sequence and it becomes a sign of hope with the rest of the movie filled with crackling fires and horses neighing with the 'sounds of the forest' .

The food and water are scarce ,yet it rains in a bleak moment and this is a reprisal as are the livestock which sustain the surviving remnants .

The awaited supply train which runs in the finale is the solitary hope in a metaphor for the troubled human civilization ,albeit Haneke discusses racial ,religious and political mythology in the context of a 'Polack family' amongst the survivors who are blamed as a scapegoat as a sacrificial goat ,but the fact there is a rough order that evolves in the mayhem and a desperate compassion which is demonstrated by the majority of the protagonists witness the revival of human spirit.

The character of the child 'Benny'[THE SON ]is fascinating as he is representing the symbol of self-sacrifice that will redeem humanity of it's sins and his resilient defiance is a symbol of humanity in all it's glory.

The fact haneke does not draw into discussing the root cause of this biological disaster is genius as it is the consequences and the human behaviour elicited by the event that is crucial ,and the finale absolves humanity and haneke himself of his critics who accuse him of pessimistic delusions .

The movie is 'altruistic rather than nihilistic' and it evolves from it's dark epilogue to the surreal finale in a fascinating mixture of subplots and characters ,here nature is the main player in control of humanity ,whether we are talking of a 'biological war or global warming' is insignificant ,the philosophy here is how might the survivors prepare to survive that event whether this represents our present milieu itself ,which makes it a greater truth and satire on the current political situation itself .

The movie is a warning to the smug reality of the current urban Western culture as to the fragility of the modern technology,yet complex bureaucratic framework .

This is an observation ,it is neither sentimental nor a sermon as it does not judge but simply see the natural progression of events as they unfold with each character performing in accords to their conscience ,and leaves the audience to infer the conclusion.
Great work from a genius .

3.PIANO TEACHER-

Life is a natural gift and art is an imitation of life ,it is at best a humanist communication of that imitation to be perceived as an imitation of nature ,as far as music is concerned it is natural as the two are not to be confused with art itself ,music and Schubert here are presented in the dual persona of the teacher who is a cold intellectual and a perverse voyeur in private ,the right of privacy is inviolable and as such an artist has the right to perceive out of their private life,in this case a 'sexually repressed woman' who is a musical genius ,she fantasises about sex in a pornographic milieu ,this is possibly a satire on sadomasochism as a direct consequence of being borne out of a deliberate yet cynical celebration of perversion.

The movie is great not because the performances of Isabella Huppert as the paradoxically real woman intellectual being pursued obsessively by a charmingly handsome younger student ,infatuated by her talent as Majimel are outstanding, but rather because of the distinction it makes between the fact that nature ceases to be reality as soon as it is rendered into an artistic media as it becomes a human creation .

The moment you indulge in an artistic maneouvre you enter a different domain ,a replication of life itself while that itself can be glorious but it can never be the same as the 'naked truth '.

Nature and life never change but art does change in forms as it is a human perception and not an eternal truth in itself .

This is the primary reason why 'piano teacher' is a great movie,because it observes this 'battle of sexes' through the cerebral lens of cinema without judging or siding with the 2 main characters, who are indulging themselves in a controlled yet dangerously reckless manner to their weirdly perverse passions in a game ,the evolution of Majimel from a 'charming infatuated youth' to a 'violent rapist' is only natural as he is a natural animal under his cloak of civility and the woman provokes and awakes that natural beast and the primal instinct to conquer.

The natural consequences are shown without graphic sex in a very cold manner devoid of sexual gratification ,but evoke a desperate pessimism of the human state in it's solitary confinement .

The man is fully aware of the consequences of his actions and informs the woman not to report the offence,yet he appears totally non-chalant in the next sequennce as he has justified his act itself to himself. Read more ›
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25 of 28 people found the following review helpful
By William Cohen VINE™ VOICE
Format:DVD|Amazon Verified Purchase
In the multimedia world, most of the information we absorb is simple and designed to grab your attention. Political ideas are reduced to simple messages for mass consumption. I'm interested in contemporary city life, especially its diversity and complexity.

I lived for nine years in central London. I moved out three years ago, and I've found it difficult to express what an overwhelming and difficult experience it was. Then I saw Michael Haneke's Hidden - the story of a well-to-do professional family in Paris, which is drawn into contact with an immigrant family on the other side of the tracks. The encounter shows the weaknesses in urban family life, the pressures, the loneliness, the difficulty of communicating, the animosity and impatience when confronted to people who don't share your values.

Haneke creates mood by focusing the camera on buildings for long periods. He films very banal events, which are affecting because they are familiar to you. In Code Unknown, we watch Binoche ironing a T-shirt for nearly five minutes. But during that scene she hears a child being hit by a parent in a neighbouring flat. I remember a similar experience. My flatmate, who I disliked, was being beaten by her boyfriend. I didn't know what to do. She didn't like me, either. It was a big turning point in my life, because I realised there are brutal things in life going on, but what am I supposed to do?

The subject matter of the Piano Teacher is at times, repulsive: perversion, disturbing fantasy, a highly dysfunctional relationship between mother and daughter. Who would want to pay good money to see this? But it is not a self-indulgent wallowing in horrible things. It does say something very plausible about the way human relationships go.

Time of the Wolf is an apocalyptic film. It shows human beings deprived of their dignity in a desperate situation. Of the four films, it's the hardest, but it helps to define how Haneke works as a film-maker.

Code Unknown has some really dull scenes: a tractor plouging a field, a man giving a motorbike to his son, a ride in a car through a Rumanian village. But there is one ten-minute scene, when the Juliette Binoche character gets some abuse from an Arab boy on the Metro. It gives you a feel of how vulnerable you are on the tube. Nobody springs to her defence at the beginning. She moves. He follows. Then he spits in her ear. Another Arab man goes to kick him, and you expect a fight to break out. The boy stays on the train, and you think the altercation is over. Then he gets off, turns and shouts into the carriage, making everyone jump with shock.

This short scene says many things about what it's like to live in an international city: the hostility, the kindness, the chaos, the fear, the vulnerability.

Code Unknown ends by following the Binoche character as she comes out of the Metro station and goes into her flat. What's that all about? Well, if you've lived in London, Paris or New York, it says how lonely and hard urban life is. How many things you have to deal with, how fragile your relationships are. How difficult it is to express and fulfill your desires and wishes.

Pretentious, yes, difficult, yes, boring, a bit, commercial, hardly, critically successful, not really, but somehow Haneke says things on film that you can't put into words.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
fabulous films 7 Jan 2010
Format:DVD
Hi bought these as a gift - recipient loved the White Ribbon by the same director and thoroughly enjoyed all of these
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