Film Review
Even Michael Haneke's most committed admirers are likely to be taken by
surprise with his latest film, an understated yet powerfully moving
portrait of an elderly couple facing up to the grim realities of
encroaching death.
Amour has the visceral brutality
of the director's other recent films (
La Pianiste (2001),
Caché (2005)),
but there is also a staggering humanity to the film. It is little wonder
that it received the top prize (the Palme d'or) at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival,
the same award that Haneke had won
for his previous film
The White
Ribbon (2009). With harrowingly authentic performances
from two of France's finest actors - Jean-Louis Trintignant and Emmanuelle Riva
(
Hiroshima mon amour,
Thérèse Desqueyroux)
-
Amour is a film of
extraordinary intensity and emotional power, possibly Haneke's greatest
film, certainly his most intimate and humane.
Even in these enlightened times, growing old and dying in old age
remain almost taboo subjects in cinema. It is the future that
none of us wants to face, can bear to imagine for ourselves - the slow,
remorseless process of physical debilitation and stripping away of our
faculties. In tackling such a challenging subject, and doing so
with an uncompromising, almost brutal realism, Haneke and his two lead
actors show remarkable courage and commitment. It is hard to know
which is more difficult to watch: Anne's gradual mental and physical
decline as her dementia takes hold and literally devours her, or her
husband Georges's mounting distress as his wife, the most precious
thing in his life, is slowly taken away from him. Neither Anne
nor Georges has the comfort of religious faith to fall back
on. Throughout their lives, music has been their religion,
their one passport to the transcendent. Now, adrift in a godless
universe, they must face up to death on their own terms, the love they
have for one another being their only support and consolation.
What is most distressing about the couple's plight is how they become
increasingly withdrawn from the world around them. Georges is
determined to honour his pledge not to allow Anne to be consigned to a
nursing home, but in doing so he cuts himself off from others who might
have been able to share his burden. Even the couple's daughter
(Isabelle Huppert, impressive as ever in her third Haneke film) finds
herself excluded from their personal ordeal. We know how the
story will end from the shocking flashforward at the start of the film,
but still we are emotionally unprepared for the long and painful
journey that Haneke takes us on, a journey that culminates in the most
wrenching expression of love that a piece of cinema is capable of
showing.
Amour featured prominently at the 2013 Césars
ceremony, with nominations in no fewer than ten categories. It won the top
five awards, for Best Actress (Emmanuelle Riva), Best Actor (Jean-Louis Trintignant),
Best Original Screenplay, Best Director and Best Film.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Michael Haneke film:
Code inconnu (2000)
Film Synopsis
Georges and Anne are a happily married couple who are now in their eighties.
Retired piano teachers, they have a daughter who is also a musician, but
she lives abroad with her own family. One morning, the couple are having
breakfast when Anne suffers a sudden stroke, which leaves her paralysed on
one side. With his wife now confined to a wheelchair, Georges takes
on the burden of looking after her himself. Then, one day, Anne confides
in her husband that she no longer wants to go on living. As Anne's
condition further deteriorates, Georges finds it harder to give her the care
she needs and ends up having to engage a nurse. The strain of caring
for his dying wife eventually becomes more than Georges can bear...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.