Una famiglia europea che ha intenzione di scappare in Australia, sembra intrappolata nella sua routine quotidiana, turbata solo da piccoli incidenti. Tuttavia, dietro la loro calma stanno ef... Leggi tuttoUna famiglia europea che ha intenzione di scappare in Australia, sembra intrappolata nella sua routine quotidiana, turbata solo da piccoli incidenti. Tuttavia, dietro la loro calma stanno effettivamente progettando qualcosa di sinistro.Una famiglia europea che ha intenzione di scappare in Australia, sembra intrappolata nella sua routine quotidiana, turbata solo da piccoli incidenti. Tuttavia, dietro la loro calma stanno effettivamente progettando qualcosa di sinistro.
- Premi
- 2 vittorie e 1 candidatura in totale
- Self
- (filmato d'archivio)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizBased on real events.
- Citazioni
Georg Schober: We have to cancel the newspaper subscription
Anna Schober: Mhm
- ConnessioniFeatured in Selección TCM: Michael Haneke (2012)
- Colonne sonoreSend Me Roses
(uncredited)
Written by Günter Mokesch and Karin Raab
Performed by Günter Mokesch and Karin Raab
The Schobers, husband George (Dieter Berner), wife Anna (Birgit Doll), and daughter Eva (Leni Tanzer), are the happily married family living next door. George is an engineer and Anna an optician. Eva is a bright child of about eight with deep, expressive eyes. The family moves through their morning ritual with precision -- brushing their teeth, feeding the fish, and eating breakfast with little conversation or emotional interaction. The camera avoids their faces, focusing on mundane objects such as a bowl of cereal, an alarm clock, a fish tank, a package of congealed broccoli. This preoccupation with objects underscores the lack of connection between the characters and the things they have acquired. We get our first hint that something is not right when Eva pretends to her teacher that she has lost her eyesight. Anna questions her about the incident, promising not to harm her if she tells the truth but, when Eva admits to the lie, suddenly slaps her across the face ignoring the fact that she is a very troubled little girl. It is from here that the cracks begin to widen.
Depicting ritualistic actions like counting of money at a supermarket, the distractions of television, the meaninglessness of work, the film reflects the powerlessness and isolation of people in modern society. Haneke chronicles a family enslaved to the structures they have created, operating in a morass of emotional vacuity. The first hour may seem slow but it builds considerable tension until it reaches a shattering climax. Little by little the family disengages. George quits his job and writes letters to his parents hinting of something dark about to happen. In the absence of a spiritual core, without the possibility of meaningful action, the family sinks deeper into an abyss, unraveling and discarding the tightly woven structures of their life. Similar in theme to Todd Haynes' 1995 film Safe but with three times the power, The Seventh Continent is a ruthlessly intelligent film that burns its way into your psyche, leaving an indelible mark that will forever haunt your dreams.
- howard.schumann
- 24 ago 2003
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