Funny Games, 1997.
At their luxurious and quiet summer home, a family finds themselves trammeled by two disarming but disquieting young men… and then the story begins to unfurl its vile tapestry.
21K1327K1BL._AA115_.jpg Director Michael Haneke, known for his provocative oeuvre, claims this is the single film he made intentionally to provoke. And provocative it certainly is, with a stomach-churning dispassion that, by contrast, makes the moments of action (many of them off-screen) so horrifically galvanizing.
Funny Games is all about conventions and complicity; it self-consciously examines cinematic violence and suspense, and the contract between filmmaker and viewer as collaborators in atrocity. Games require rules, and the film is obsessed with rules, but be warned: Haneke doesn’t play fair.
I am participating in NaBloPoMo.