Michael Haneke Funny Games

Michael Haneke Funny Games. Funny Games (Michael Haneke 1997) PANTERA CINE All this aims to make the viewer reflect on themselves, what they enjoy watching, and what. Funny Games is a 1997 Austrian satirical psychological thriller film written and directed by Michael Haneke, and starring Susanne Lothar, Ulrich Mühe, and Arno Frisch.The plot involves two young men who hold a family hostage in their vacation home and torture them with sadistic games.

Funny Games (1997) von Michael Haneke Kritik Cinema Austriaco
Funny Games (1997) von Michael Haneke Kritik Cinema Austriaco from cinema-austriaco.org

With Naomi Watts, Tim Roth, Michael Pitt, Brady Corbet Haneke: "Funny Games" (1997) Topics Haneke, Funny Games Item Size 921.6M

Funny Games (1997) von Michael Haneke Kritik Cinema Austriaco

At its heart, Funny Games is a curious sociological probe, dropped down the crevasse of horror cinema like a flare, shining light on the endlessness to question the meaning for such visceral gore, though, of course, Haneke is well-aware of the answer At its heart, Funny Games is a curious sociological probe, dropped down the crevasse of horror cinema like a flare, shining light on the endlessness to question the meaning for such visceral gore, though, of course, Haneke is well-aware of the answer Michael Haneke's most notorious provocation, Funny Games spares no detail in its depiction of the agony of a bourgeois family held captive at their vacation home by a pair of white-gloved young men

Funny Games (1997) von Michael Haneke Kritik Cinema Austriaco. With Naomi Watts, Tim Roth, Michael Pitt, Brady Corbet A May 2017 interview with Michael Haneke regarding his controversial 1997 classic, "Funny Games".Source: Funny Games Criterion Blu-ray

Funny Games, Australien 1997 Regie Michael Haneke Darsteller Ulrich Mühe, Arno Frisch, Frank. In a series of escalating "games," the sadistic duo subject their victims to unspeakable physical and psychological torture over the course of a night The film was entered into the 1997 Cannes Film Festival, generated controversy for depiction of graphic.