Caché (Hidden)
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Check link for latest rating. ( 55 ratings, 6 reviews)This edition features a new foreword reflecting on Caché's relevance amid today’s surveillance culture and misinformation.
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Caché (Hidden)
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Ever since its world premiere at the Cannes film festival in May 2005, audiences have been talking about Michael Haneke's Caché. The film's enigmatic and multi-layered narrative leaves its viewers with many more questions than answers. The plot revolves around the mystery of who is sending a series of sinister videos and drawings to Georges Laurent (Daniel Auteuil), the presenter of a literary talk show. As Georges becomes increasingly secretive, much to the distress of his wife Anne (Juliette Binoche), a culprit fails to surface. Even at the film's end, audiences are left struggling to make sense of what has gone before.
This hasn't stopped people trying. In an in-depth and illuminating account, Wheatley examines the key themes at the heart of the 'meaning' of Caché: the film as thriller, post-colonial bourgeois guilt, political accountability, and, lastly, reality, the media and its audiences. She traces these strands through the film by means of close readings of individual scenes and moments. Inspired by the director's claim that we might understand the film as a set of Russian dolls, each of which is complete in itself but together forms a whole in which layers of unseen depth are concealed, Wheatley avoids a single, unifying approach to understanding Caché. Instead, her detailed analysis of the film's shifting perspectives opens up the multiplicity of meanings that Caché contains, in order to understand its secrets.
This edition includes a new foreword in which the author reflects upon Caché in the context of Haneke's subsequent work, and considers the film's contemporary resonances in an era of omnipresent surveillance technology and doctored 'fake news' videos.
Series: BFI Film Classics
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INFORMATION
ISBN: 9781838719562
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Format: Paperback / softback
Date Published: 28 May 2020
Country: United Kingdom
Imprint: BFI Publishing
Edition: 2nd edition
Illustration: 60 colour illus
Audience: Professional and scholarly
DIMENSIONS
Spine width: 4.0mm
Width: 132.0mm
Height: 188.0mm
Weight: 169g
Pages: 104
About the Author
Catherine Wheatley is Senior Lecturer in Film Studies at King's College London, UK. She is the author of Stanley Cavell and Film: The Ethics of the Image (Bloomsbury, 2019); Michael Haneke's Cinema: The Ethic of the Image (2008) and the co-editor of Je t'aime… moi non plus: Franco-British Cinematic Relations (2010).
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