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The Piano Teacher [DVD] [2001]

3.8 out of 5 stars 38 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Actors: Isabelle Huppert, Annie Girardot, Benoît Magimel
  • Directors: Michael Haneke
  • Format: PAL, HiFi Sound, Colour, Anamorphic, Widescreen
  • Language: French
  • Subtitles: English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: Unknown
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 18
  • Studio: Import
  • DVD Release Date: 23 April 2013
  • Run Time: 129 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (38 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00006422Z
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 8,026 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

Product Description

Product Description

Erika (Isabelle Huppert) teaches classical piano in a cold and often abrasive style. Approaching middle age, Erika lives with her doting mother (Annie Girardot) and still sleeps in the same bed with her. Erika's social life consists of occasionally sneaking away to a peep show where she secretly comes into contact with perverse passion, often using the discarded trash of previous customers. Her beautiful piano playing seduces youthful Walter (Benoit Magimel), who then takes the instructor's advanced class. Walter reveals his desire during a class session. Erika reacts curiously, presenting a long list of cruel, humiliating sexual acts she would like him to perform on her. Meanwhile, the teacher also torments a talented student (Anna Sigalevitch) who is already plagued by her own fears. Michael Haneke (CODE UNKNOWN) directed this unflinching allegorical tale of cruelty. The film caused a stir at the Cannes Film Festival where it was controversial not only for its subject matter, but also because it won multiple awards there--the Grand Prize and acting awards for both Huppert and Magimel--despite leaving many audience members outraged. Based on a novel by Elfriede Jelinek, the film features numerous classical piano sonatas banged out in an aggressive style.

From Amazon.co.uk

An unexpected critical (Grand Prix at Cannes) and commercial (three months in London's West End) success on its release in 2001, The Piano Teacher is a provocative, but ultimately frustrating, film. The intensifying relationship between Erika Kohut, a Viennese piano teacher whose musical focus is gradually undone by sexual repression, and Walter Klemmer, her uninhibited but unsuspecting student and admirer, lacks an underlying motivation, either physical or emotional, to sustain the tortuous encounters of the film's later stages.

Director Michael Haneke powerfully evokes the claustrophobic décor of the flat that Kohut shares with her dictatorial yet ineffectual mother, with whom her relationship progresses from the pitiful to the farcical. And farce of the blackest kind is what the film descends to, as Kohut and Klemmer play out a vicious game of sado-masochistic control with an intriguing but indecisive conclusion.

Isabelle Huppert is magnificently assured as Kohut, but Benoît Magimel often seems confused as Klemmer, while Annie Girardot resorts to a caricature of the mother. Fans of classical piano will enjoy the masterclass and rehearsal sequences during the first hour, though music is then relegated to a minor role--its deeper relevance to the film being ultimately difficult to define. English subtitles are provided, and the monochrome shades in which the scenes abound come through with suitably wan intensity. Yet it's hard not to feel that a more profound inquiry into the darker side of sexual desire has been lost along the way. --Richard Whitehouse --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: DVD Verified Purchase
This film is a perfect example of French cinema at its best. One of France's greatest actresses - Isabelle Huppert - plays the part of Erika, a Viennese piano teacher, late thirties and sexually repressed, she lives an isolated, lonely life in a small apartment with her aged and volatile mother with whom she has a love-hate relationship. She has masochistic tendencies and pays clandestine visits to sex-shops to view hardcore pornography. She is aware of her own talent and skill as a teacher of the classical piano and judges others harshly. When a young male student approaches her she is impressed by his musical capabilities on the piano. He too is drawn to her. With her state of mind aroused and the young student's youthful naivety fully engaged they begin an affair.
This is not a film for the faint-hearted or lovers of `Mary Poppins plays piano' type of entertainment! It is at times very dark, and sexually explicit, though the latter amounts to no more that about ten minutes or less in total in a film of over two hours. But what there is, is strong and often violent. I did wonder about the strength of the sexual scenes, until I realised it had to be so, to fully explain the intense state of mind of Erika. The film is, after all, about Erika's mental condition and her relationship with the people in her life.
The classical piano music to be heard, although the film is not about this, is nevertheless essential and enjoyable, and most is heard during the early half of the film. My only small (very) criticism is I thought the sub-titling was a little on the large side - others may not agree! It does not in any case hinder the following of the screenplay.
There are a good number of reviews of this movie - some of which are very comprehensive, even learned.
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By schumann_bg TOP 50 REVIEWER on 28 Sept. 2014
Format: DVD
The Piano Teacher is one of the most heartbreaking films you could see, in fact I found myself repeatedly pausing the DVD to steel myself for what was coming, having seen it in the cinema on its release. I do find it much greater now than I did then, partly because I had so wanted it to be a different sort of film, or at least turn into one. But this is a film that grinds all hope underfoot like a cigarette butt, until not a smoulder remains. It essentially turns on three points: Erika Kohut, distinguished professor of piano at the Vienna Conservatoire, her mother, and a young student who acts as a catalyst for all the repression and distortion she has been subject to from childhood. The mother is a monster of control and egotism, and has effectively controlled her daughter's life and denied her all possibility of happiness. Not that she is successful enough for her mother, who still pushes her to excel and perform in the hope she might be noticed and her soloist's career take off.

The film really shows how far a demonic parent can go in destroying their child. Erika is hard to like, but as you realise how she has been affected, and that this very appealing young man, Walter Klemmer, will be powerless to get beyond the blocks, you cannot help feeling devastated and oddly moved. The final sequence is one of the most violent I have ever seen, even though it is not THAT violent in real terms, certainly not in comparison with what we are used to seeing. It is also acutely painful to see how Walter, with his young man's bravado, is sucked down into the degradation, even though he does bring a note of comedy at times. The acting by all three leads is astonishing, and the direction by Michael Haneke has all his trademark clinical clarity and unrelenting gaze.
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By Dr. Delvis Memphistopheles TOP 500 REVIEWERVINE VOICE on 22 April 2013
Format: DVD
In which Haneke plunges the knife into the social pretence of refinement, culture and manners to detail the underlying S&M undertones to the presumed haughtiness and bullying.

Brilliantly viewed as a psycho pathological masterclass the film deals with madness, relationships and a slow psychological destruction which simmers throughout the drop downwards.

Portrays the rampant bullying within this classical world as the composers are treated as rarified gods whose chimes bring forth new visions of light to the hearers but instead Haneke details the rampant lying, cheating and social autism of the whole debacle. The family that sacrifices their daughter to the bullying regime because she is not good looking enough, Teacher, Ms. Kohut tears into them with the power of a whip on their emotional chords. Brutal uncompromising she returns home to be bullied by her mother, who both cares and dominates in equal measure. Meanwhile the father is in an asylum and is only spoken about than to.

Underneath the veneer our haughty teachers seeks release in peeping booths where she sniffs on used tissue for the full effect of sensorama porn. Believing that relationships are based upon porn style sex she seeks a release with one of her students. When confronted with S&M he rebels before falling into his own version of the role and then the piano teacher is faced with an overwhelming conundrum.

A finely acted film which delivers a biting critique of etiquette with a must see clumsy sex scenes based on anything but sensory excitement.
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