The positive thing is that Kontinent has potentially rather sizeable reserves for the second viewing inasmuch as I had no idea how`s it gonna end and only realized Australia was not the actual destination very late in the game - and the awareness of where the whole thing`s going is liable to cast an entirely different light on everything that came before. The hindsight already redeemed the two bizarre episodes with the daughter at school, which originally seemed borderline idiotic.
However, what I`m not very likely to change my mind about, is the sheer tedium of watching mundane activities being excruciatingly gazed upon - closeups of a spoon emptying a bowl, cashier`s fingers hopping around the cash register, things being shredded to pieces - minute after agonizing minute. Yes, Haneke is trying to communicate the repetituous monotone boredom of everyday life as well as the obsessive streak in the husband and wife, but imo Haneke overdoes it; there`re just too many such scenes to hold the interest (I actually fast-forwarded through a couple of them later on - and that`s something I almost never do). And in the end, there`s the nagging, annoying question - what the hell was even wrong with them to go and do a thing like that? I`ve seen all this bourgeois desperation and ennui before, most obviously in Antonioni, or in something like Haynes`s Safe, but here it just didn`t quite feel as convincing or well articulated. Not quite enough nuance to the malaise.
As for the Haneke/Bergman comparison, the following`s from Slant Magazine`s review by Fernando C Croce: "How one wishes for some of Ingmar Bergman`s sardonic appreciation for absurdity to explore the satirical possibilities of a clan slowly expiring in a decimated home while Celine Dion emanates from the telly. By concentrating exclusively on humanity`s negativism, Haneke proves to be as damagingly reductive of life`s possibilities as the emotional malaise he sets out to expose". Indeed, it`s easy to grow tired of Haneke`s one-note bleakness that he carries over from film to film; his funny games ain`t funny enough.
"facts are stupid things" - Ronald Reagan
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