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Caché
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Directed by Michael Haneke
Paranoia grips a bourgeois European family when a series of menacing videotapes begin turning up on their doorstep in Piano Teacher director Michael Haneke's dark drama. From the outside, Georges (Daniel Auteuil), Anne (Juliette Binoche), and son Pierrot (Lester Makedonsky) are the typical middle-class European family, but when a series of mysterious videotapes accompanied by morbid drawings reveal that someone has been monitoring their house, Georges begins to suspect that his past has come back to haunt him. It was during France's occupation of Algeria that Georges wronged a young Algerian boy named Majid (Maurice Bénichou), and as the enraged father and husband begins tracking down his former friend, the line between victim and predator becomes increasingly blurred. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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hasn't rated it.
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"Not only is Caché a great movie, it is the second best movie theatre experience I have had. However, I cannot review the film without giving away the ending. I do not think that knowing the ending is a spoiler in any sense, but if you want to see the movie and do not like to know the ending, I suggest you not read this review until after you see the movie. [More]
chrismorrellchrismorrell where IS the grave accent on an ...
by chrismorrell in chrismorrell Blog
loved it.
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"Michael Hanekes' "Cache" (i dont think an"English" keyboard has an accent)..aka "Hidden"...Daniel Autiel and Juliette Binoche ...a disturbing study in a sort of personal, terrible retribution...brilliant "natural" dialogue and performances...a slow burner that is full of foreboding,builds to a scene of devastating horror,then recedes, and doesnt resolve in any overt way...very effective and affecting.If you think of Film as Art ,and n " [More]
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by mmok in mmok Blog
loved it.
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"The ending left me speechless. Everything was perfect in this film: acting, story, cinematography. Another Haneke masterpiece. I didn't find the pacing slow or tedious at all. Also, I was watching the behind the scenes stuff and it looks like it was shot on digital. It sure didn't look digital. What a master. " [More]
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"I'm going to be starting this marathon next Monday and I'll be giving each film a week. I've only seen one Haneke film thus far (Funny Games) and I loved it. I know some of his other stuff has received a considerable amount of praise so I've been wanting to catch up with more of it. He also just won the Palm D'Or at Cannes for his newest film, The White Ribbon. [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: Latest unknown fave
by Risselada in Viewing with a purpose
"[quote user="Jymkata"]I saw Cache in New York when it opened while I was there and I really liked it. That led me to watch more Haneke movies and the only one I haven't liked so far is Time of the Wolf. I thought Funny " [More]
JymkataJymkata Re: Latest unknown fave
by Jymkata in Viewing with a purpose
"I saw Cache in New York when it opened while I was there and I really liked it. That led me to watch more Haneke movies and the only one I haven't liked so far is Time of the Wolf. I thought Funny Games was intig " [More]
GradysGhostGradysGhost Re: Watch any good foreign film ...
by GradysGhost in Travelling with film
"I very much liked Cache. It was slow-paced, but to a point, and it creeped me the hell out. And there's a good "Oh sh!t" moment about 3/4 of the way through.La Cage aux Folles is a good French comedy, a little better than our American remake, [More]
All Movie Guide Logo
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Critics tended to agree that Michael Haneke's Caché represented a singular vision. What they couldn't mutually reconcile was whether he employed that vision toward a catharsis viewers would find satisfying -- or even accept as an ending for the film. A bracingly simple yet original take on the gradually escalating stalker story, Caché finishes in a way that shouldn't be revealed. In fact, it shouldn't even be hinted at, except that it plays a role in whether the movie is worth recommending. Suffice it to say that the ending is unconventional -- brilliant to some, maddening to others. Fortunately, the journey getting there is rich enough that even the most negative reaction to the conclusion can't spoil the experience on the whole. The eerie surveillance tapes -- which seem to come from a camera angle that couldn't exist in reality -- set the tone, and French acting treasure Daniel Auteuil sustains the tension through a performance of great quiet fear. The eventual revelations of his character Georges' secret guilt, and the details of what he's accused of, are somewhat mundane. But that's beside the point, because Caché is about subjective rather than absolute emotional damage. Georges may be deserving of these opaque threats and psychically violent intrusions into his domestic world, or he may not, but the film explores how the mere implication of guilt can twist and transform. Juliette Binoche, working in her native French, is equally strong as the wife who must absorb the dissolution of her home life without being offered an explanation for it, even though her husband knows more than he's saying. The film has enough good surprises to offset the debatable ones, and is composed at every level with consummate artistry, so Caché is an important work. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 

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