Talk:Michael Haneke

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Bruckner?[edit]

The article says "As a dramaturg, he directed a number of stage productions in German, which included Strindberg, Goethe, Bruckner, and Heinrich von Kleist in Berlin, Munich and Vienna." Bruckner was a composer. Büchner, perhaps? Albertine D Sparue 10:11, 3 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Critique of media, not TV or mass media?[edit]

The article reads, "a critique directed towards mass media, especially television, as seen in Funny Games, where some of the characters are aware that they feature in a movie, and Benny's Video, in which the main character is driven to kill an innocent girl after seeing a pig slaughtered on TV;"

Actually, the referenced scene of Benny's Video is not "on TV", but it is a home video recorded by Benny. Haneke's critique is neither specifically television nor mass media, but of how persons are distanced from life by its [mis-]representation in recorded forms such as video, film, and other media. However, in Funny Games, the characters are momentarily aware that they are performing in the movie, during which they break the fourth wall. The effect may be more of [[Verfremdungseffekt] rather than a critique of the media.

I think it best to leave it to the original author to revise such relatively finer points into the article.... Tgkohn 21:30, 31 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Actually, Haneke's objective (he talks about it extensively in Interviews and the odd essay) is that of modernist film-making which looks to be self-reflexive in form and/or content in order for the viewer to acknowledge his or her act of viewing, as well as question this act (why am I watching this? how do I feel about watching this?). With this in mind, many of his films, but mainly Funny Games, Caché and Benny's Video can be considered critiques of mass media in its post-modernist sense: that contemporary "reality" is in fact a constant flux of mediated images that imply an incapacity for people to be in touch with "actual" reality. This is enabled by techniques such as "screen within a screen" (Benny's Video, Caché), questions of the ethics of spectatorship (Funny Games) and Haneke's tendency to incorporate News images of intangible "real-life" violence (among other themes) to contrast with the authentic emotions of the characters.

alphasignaltwo 18:02, 15 July 2011 (BST +1)

Movies template[edit]

How do I edit the template for M. Haneke? Where is the page for it? Lugnuts 17:31, 23 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Picture[edit]

That is the worst picture of a person covered by this site. Are there any photos of this man that don't look like they were shot by a buttonhole camera from a spy opperation? -- 23:42, 22 September 2007 (UTC)

Themes[edit]

"characters named George and Anna (or some alternate version of those names)" is not, strictly speaking, a theme. Cesarpermanente 20:28, 25 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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