BOTTOM
LINE:
“Funny Games”
has some interesting potential with its two antagonists and self-referential
treatment, but the confrontational anti-violence themes get lost
in a very ugly and mean-spirited execution of a story that will
do nothing but leave a bad taste in your mouth.
THE
GOOD: Director Michael
Haneke has a dislike for violence and its role in the media, particularly
in the media’s ability to sensationalise violence for its
own ends. In directing “Funny Games”, a shot-by-shot
remake of his own 1997 Austrian horror film, he attempts to confront
you with how vicious and nasty real violence actually is. This is
a film that makes you feel the brutality and ugliness of violence,
particularly as nobody is spared. A young family on vacation at
their holiday house are suddenly taken hostage by a pair of well
spoken male psychopaths who proceed to torture and kill them through
the use of sadistic games. In some ways, the realness of the violence
in this film, the propensity to focus on the psychological aspects
of it as opposed to outright blood and gore, and the number of self-referential
nods to it demonstrate how disgusting the torture-porn genre which
include movies such as “Saw” and “Hostel”
really are in using this horror as an entertainment. Throughout
the film, the two psychos nod and wink to the camera, as if actively
asking you to participate in their fun, even asking us at one point
to bet on who will be the victor between them and their victims.
There is a nice demeaning banter between the two psychos that can
at times be amusing and the two actors, Michael Pitt and Brady Corbet,
do a very good job of portraying two deeply disturbed individuals
who execute their brutality through a thick layer of politeness
and supposed etiquette. Naomi Watts puts in an excellent performance
as Ann, adding a layer of depth that might have otherwise been absent.
“Funny Games” has the potential to be a unique take
on violence in the media.
THE
BAD: The experience
of watching this film vacillates between total disgust and boredom.
The film is disgusting in its mental and physical torture that it
portrays, and it is boring in every other aspect for its slow direction
and lacklustre visuals, not to mention some extremely long-winded
shots, one of which lasts for ten minutes with action that could have
been wrapped up quicker. I guess the idea is to make it as real as
possible, but then this is a film and artistic licence is always a
given. The film plays with genre conventions by setting up the possibility
of escape and then turns them on their head; not necessarily a bad
thing, but when for example the son is the first one brutally shot,
or George (Tim Roth) is gauged off screen with a kitchen knife before
being shot in front of Ann, and the absolutely ridiculous scene of
one of the psychos using a remote control to literally rewind the
action to get the upper hand after something goes wrong for them,
the film does nothing except turn you against it. There may be an
anti-violence lesson in here, but the ugly, mean-spirited and uninspired
direction of this film will do everything to sabotage that lesson
and its ability to teach you anything about the brutality of what
you are seeing.