Plot
Two psychopathic young men take a family hostage in their cabin.
Release Year: 2007
Rating: 6.4/10 (35,012 voted)
Director:
Michael Haneke
Stars: Naomi Watts, Tim Roth, Michael Pitt
Storyline In this English-language remake of a deconstruction in the way violence is portrayed in the media, a family settles into its vacation home, which happens to be the next stop for a pair of young, articulate, white-gloved serial killers on an excursion through the neighborhood.
Cast: Naomi Watts
-
Ann
Tim Roth
-
George
Michael Pitt
-
Paul
Brady Corbet
-
Peter
Devon Gearhart
-
Georgie
Boyd Gaines
-
Fred
Siobhan Fallon
-
Betsy
(as Siobhan Fallon Hogan)
Robert LuPone
-
Robert
Susi Haneke
-
Betsy's Sister-in-Law
(as Susanna Haneke)
Linda Moran
-
Eve
Filming Locations: Broadway Stages, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
Box Office Details
Budget: $15,000,000
(estimated)
Opening Weekend: $510,958
(USA)
(16 March 2008)
(274 Screens)
Gross: $1,294,640
(USA)
(27 April 2008)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
The film is a shot-by-shot remake of the original.
Goofs:
Continuity:
During the opening sequence, when George and Ann are listening to CDs in the car the shadows of the car and boat indicate that the sun is alternating between side-on/quite low in the sky to directly behind the car and almost overhead.
Quotes: George:
Why are you doing this? Peter:
Why not?
User Review
Why?
Rating: 6/10
When I heard Michael Haneke was re-making Funny Games in America I
wondered why: what purpose could it possibly serve? The set-up to both
versions is simple in that a bourgeois family is subjected to a
torturous ordeal by a couple of ever so polite psychopaths. Moreover,
like the original the re-make is a cruel exercise in exposing our
fascination with the violence depicted in the media - the "our"
specifically meaning the middle classes, comfortable in our existences
and oblivious to the horrors of the world.
However, Haneke is on record as saying that he always considered Funny
Games to be an "American story", as he regarded the use of violence as
a form of entertainment to be a specifically American phenomenon. No
matter that this is a bit of a flawed viewpoint: having the aggressors
seem straight out of the O.C. gives the impact of their sadistic
actions an even more discomfiting air. Michael Pitt (charismatic and
barbarous) and Brady Corbett (seemingly dopey but utterly vicious) are
both excellent, but their performances leave one feeling a bit um "seen
it all before".
Which takes me back to my first thought: what is the point? Cosmetics
aside this is exactly the same film, right down to the assumption that
the well to do like to listen to classical music and that the audience
may be unsettled by playing them some thrash metal. Haneke even has
Pitt address the camera and manipulate the film, so re-using the trick
about playing with reality and focusing the viewer on what actually
counts as real. It is just that this playing around does not carry the
impact it did 10 years ago.
In fact, due to the unconventional nature of the film and the vast
disparity it offers with reality it's hard to care much at all. Yes
what happens is horrible, but it does not feel at all real. I'm waiting
for someone to point out that, that is Haneke's point, but frankly, I
don't care. No amount of intellectualising can make this watchable.
You would think Haneke would know better too. His most recent film
Hidden took a genre film and flipped it about to deliver one of the
most surprising and intellectually challenging thrillers of the decade.
By stringing the audience along and offering some sense of catharsis
and understanding of character motivation he offered a way in. Funny
Games U.S. offers no such intrigue or tension and is ultimately a big
step backward. He may see it as an American story, but it worked better
as a small Austrian film, set in anywheres-ville Europe.
Plot
Two psychotic young men take a mother, father, and son hostage in their vacation cabin and force them to play sadistic "games" with one another for their own amusement.
Release Year: 1997
Rating: 7.6/10 (21,040 voted)
Critic's Score: 41/100
Director:
Michael Haneke
Stars: Susanne Lothar, Ulrich Mühe, Arno Frisch
Storyline Two seemingly well-educated young men, who call each other Paul and Peter among other names, approach a family on vacation. They are, apparently, friends of the neighbors, and, at the beginning, their true intentions are not known. But soon, the family is imprisoned and tortured in its own house violently, which the viewers are forced mostly to imagine and to share a certain complicity with the criminals. It might be some kind of game with the lives of husband, wife, son, and dog, but why are they doing it?
Cast: Susanne Lothar
-
Anna
Ulrich Mühe
-
Georg
Arno Frisch
-
Paul
Frank Giering
-
Peter
Stefan Clapczynski
-
Schorschi
Doris Kunstmann
-
Gerda
Christoph Bantzer
-
Fred
Wolfgang Glück
-
Robert
Susanne Meneghel
-
Gerdas Schwester
Monika Zallinger
-
Eva
Taglines:
Ein Alptraum.
Release Date: 11 March 1998
Filming Locations: Atelier Rosenhügel, Vienna, Austria
Gross: AUD 41,828
(Australia)
(August 1998)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
Paul says the line "We're not up to feature film length yet" at exactly the 95-minute mark of the movie.
Goofs:
Crew or equipment visible:
When Anna and Georg are driving in their car, a reflection of a microphone between the front seats can be seen on the window.
Okay... I just read most of the 144 user reviews.... Basically I wanted to
make up my mind about this film, a film that is a very heavy
load.
I've seen this movie 5 years ago, the good thing is most of the time you
forget about (having seen) it but now and then you recall it. I can
understand that many people hate this film, it is not nice to watch, the
more when you see it in a theatre where the only chance to break its spell
is leaving the theatre. Regardless if you leave or stay and watch it leave
it beats you one way or the other. I fully agree with many other reviewers
that I have no idea whom I should recommend it too. I am tempted to watch
it
a second time but didn't make it happen in 5 years.
Don't get me wrong. I think it is an excellent movie. It is also very
disturbing and upsetting, I can't think of the right mood to watch it
cause
it'll take you down. And I think here is where the movie polarises. If,
after watching, you find yourself deducting some message in the violence,
and perhaps rethink violence - in both real life and movies - you will,
well, also will have found some reason for this movies existence, if not -
and it might be better if one does not - you will join in the 'crappiest
movie ever chorus'.
I do however want to point out some achievement of this
production:
*) The movie catches the audience in theatre.
*) It does shock the audience but most of the violence is off-screen. You
see more people dying in many fast-driven action movies. Only here you
care.
There is minor suspense, but I, personally, wouldn't put it into that
category. (But then I am no horror/shocker/suspense fan and can easily err
here)
*) It's hard to compare it with any other movie (that I have seen). I am
not
sure if this is an achievement, but it's outstanding.
The reason I think Haneke made this movie. or, what I deducted from it is
how far away violence and death are in our everyday lives today. While
Hollywood - and other film productions serve them daily right in our
living
room, we hardly notice them anymore. Violence also sells movies, and we're
meanwhile pretty used to that. Haneke also serves violence, and he dishes
it
next-door. He turns into a moral figure that asks the audience if they
want
more (after all me and you consume it every day) - and while HERE we want
to
say 'no please stop' he doesn't do our silent bidding. He pushes us down
the
drain, forcing us to deal with aspects of the violence we don't (want to)
see. He even goes one step further. He offers us a 'good' ending, a
payback
that would make it easier for us to bear the movie, only to snatch it back
and rip us of any cheerful emotion, telling us like 'no, sorry, here it
doesn't work that way'.
I also read reviews mentioning the unsatisfying (often used, cliche) end.
One more time Haneke manages to disappoint us, so far we were driven and
didn't know what would happen, what to expect.
Only in the ending, we see it coming, and so it ends, obviously similar to
many other movies. We're back standard movie stuff, the arc bent and the
connection made.
"Funny games" is everything else but the title. Perhaps it refers to the
funny games built on standard film violence in everyday movies. Perhaps it
doesn't. Perhaps Haneke wants to stress that violence is a bad thing.
Perhaps he's just sick.
One thing for sure, regardless if you like it, don't care, or hate it. You
might have seen something somewhat like it, but nothing
similar.
If you hate shockers, don't watch it. It will only be torture.
If you love suspense, sorry, only very little gore here.
If you plan to watch it, calculate a few hours before you will manage to
put
your head to rest.
And don't watch it it personal crisis.
This movie will make you feel bad. If you watch it in a cinema, just look
around. You're not alone with this feeling.
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