Director – Michael Haneke – 2001 – UK – Cert. 18 – 131m
*****
A masochistic piano teacher with an abusive mother embarks on an affair with a young male student – the opening film of Complicit: A Michael Haneke Retrospective, in cinemas from Friday, June 6th
Warning: NSFW.
This is at once representative of Haneke’s wider body of work and very different from it.
Representative because he is one of those directors whose personal use of cinematic vocabulary has been so honed over his years of making movies that he is able to clearly and precisely articulate problematic, controversial and taboo ideas and subject matter that few directors would be able to handle without descending into exploitation or commercialism. He is a director steeped in cinema, fascinated by how the process of making a movie constructs the narrative or other viewing and listening experience, and how that is perceived and understood by audiences.
Different because although Haneke generally writes as well and directs his own films, they are mostly original pieces whereas this one is an adaptation of a book, The Piano Teacher / Die Klavierspielerin by Elfriede Jelinek. Essentially a character study of a woman exhibiting sexual dysfunction, there’s nothing else in his oeuvre (or any other filmmaker’s, for that matter) that I have ever seen that’s quite like it.… Read the rest