BFI at Home | Filmmakers in Focus: Michael Haneke

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 18. 02. 2021
  • Over the last 30 years, the Austrian writer-director Michael Haneke has established himself as one of the leading figures in international cinema, winning major festival prizes and critical acclaim around the world for such extraordinary films as Hidden, The White Ribbon and Amour, now all available to watch on BFI Player.
    In this illustrated discussion, BFI programmer-at-large Geoff Andrew and Catherine Wheatley, the author of two books on Haneke’s work, focus on these films and others to examine what makes him such a distinctive, important and often controversial cinematic artist.
    Michael Haneke was born in 1942 to a German father and Austrian mother, both actors. In the late 1960s, after studying philosophy, psychology and drama at the University of Vienna, he began working for German and Austrian television, first as a writer and editor, then as the writer-director of a series of films whose audacity and seriousness of purpose anticipated his later theatrical releases. The first of these, The Seventh Continent, appeared in 1989, and over the next decade or so, with uncompromising, often award-winning films like Funny Games, Code Unknown and The Piano Teacher, he became a firm fixture on the festival and art-house circuit, reaching larger and more enthusiastic audiences with each new release.
    #MichaelHaneke #BFIAtHome #BFIPlayer
    Subscribe: bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI
    Claim an extended BFI Player Subscription free trial (UK only) - subscribe using code BFICZcams: theb.fi/player-subscription
    BFI Player is brought to you with the support of Creative Europe - MEDIA Programme of the European Union.
    Watch more on BFI Player: player.bfi.org.uk/
    Like us on Facebook: / britishfilminstitute
    Follow us on Instagram: / britishfilminstitute
    Follow us on Twitter: / bfi
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 5

  • @YMS
    @YMS Před 3 lety +67

    The best

  • @barbarellaville
    @barbarellaville Před 3 lety +12

    Good interview. Haneke is the greatest living Western filmmaker. Frighteningly prophetic. Notice how his older movies seem completely fresh.

  • @loopydeloopy
    @loopydeloopy Před 3 lety +6

    Thank you. You've reignited my interest in Haneke.

  • @happychey13
    @happychey13 Před 3 lety +21

    Haneke is like a post-postmodernist film-maker. He highlights the composed artificial nature of film-making, while simultaneously presenting scenarios in a hyper-realistic manner, void of the normal comforts which cue us in to the artifice of the traditional cinema, such as a musical score. He goes far beyond the postmodern fixation on inter-textual irony ala figures such as Tarantino. The function of his cinema is to confront the reality, particularly the reality of the consequences of violence, incarnate within the fictive simulation and the dialectical indissociability of the latter from the former. Haneke imparts on us the wisdom to take fictions seriously.

  • @PatrickTouma
    @PatrickTouma Před 3 lety +5

    Dope