... Cache is taut, terse, brisk and immediately engaging ...
Caché (2005)
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Reviews Counted:126
Fresh:111
Rotten:15
Average Rating:7.8/10
Consensus: A creepy French psychological thriller that commands the audience's attention throughout.
Theatrical Release:2005
Box Office: $3,453,754
Synopsis: Writer/director Michael Haneke delivers a masterpiece of unsettlement with CACHÉ. Life seems perfect for Georges (Daniel Auteuil) and Anne (Juliette Binoche), a bourgeois Parisian couple who live... Writer/director Michael Haneke delivers a masterpiece of unsettlement with CACHÉ. Life seems perfect for Georges (Daniel Auteuil) and Anne (Juliette Binoche), a bourgeois Parisian couple who live in a comfortable home with their adolescent son, Pierrot (Lester Makedonsky). But when an anonymous videotape turns up on their doorstep, showing their house under surveillance from across the street, their calm life begins to spiral out of control. Subsequent videotapes arrive, accompanied by mysterious drawings, and gradually Georges becomes convinced that he's being tormented by a figure from his past. But when he confronts him, the man assures Georges he is innocent. A growing sense of guilt begins to rise in Georges as he recalls his less-than-angelic childhood, yet for some reason he's unable to be completely honest with Anne. Soon, their happy home is an emotional battleground, leading to a climax that is breathtaking in its ferocity and ambiguousness. Though Haneke's film works first and foremost as an insidious thriller, it is also a powerful commentary on the urban paranoia and racism that continue to permeate modern society. Without using a score, and keeping his camera detached and static, Haneke nonetheless establishes a nearly unbearable level of tension. Not for the squeamish, CACHÉ remains a work of menacing brilliance, and was the winner of the Best Director award at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival. [More]
Starring: Juliette Binoche, Daniel Auteuil, Maurice Benichou, Annie Girardot
Starring: Juliette Binoche, Daniel Auteuil, Maurice Benichou, Annie Girardot, Daniel Duval, Nathalie Richard
Director: Michael Haneke
Director: Michael Haneke
Producer: Margaret Menegoz, Veit Heiduschka
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
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Reviews for Caché
... a brilliantly sinister mystery fraught with guilt, deceit and denial.
The film is almost claustrophobically personal and yet fascinatingly broad in scope, an ambitious undertaking by director Michael Haneke.
Tempting as it is to dismiss Cache as a liberal guilt trip in the guise of a thriller, it is at the same time hard to deny its creepy, insinuating power.
If Haneke's The Piano Teacher featured a riveting, but overwritten central character, his lean script for Caché (Hidden) moves in the opposite direction.
A haunting expose' about a camera with a mind of its own and the closet of skeletons it barely holds in check.
A film about chickens coming home to roost, about arrogant people refusing to accept responsibility for their past sins... Voyeuristic and creepy.
To some degree, Hidden is a cat-and-mouse thriller, the only problem being that mouse and cat insist on swapping roles.
Just when you think Haneke will slip away under the cloak of total obfuscation, he hits us with a long, final mega-shot.
Haneke, who tends toward big-themed allegory, has devised an original mystery hidden within a challenging technique.
A creepy, complicitous thriller that ratchets up the tension even as it asks us to study the mechanics of film fright.
There's a sense that Hitchcock is hovering in the background and cheering for Auteuil, who musters all his French superstardom to play a man having his mask of blandness torn off.
I wasn’t prepared to be easily won over by Caché, but it turns out to be his most human and affecting movie to date.
[Haneke's] dark world view comes elegantly wrapped in its own contradiction.
The early sequences’ chilling suspense winds up getting hidden amidst its crowded, clumsy allegorical concerns.
The film's frequent long takes are painful both on the eye and on the plot.
Latest News for Caché
January 11, 2006:
Chicago Critics Pick Their 2005 Winners (and Iowa!)
The Chicago Film Critics Group announced their nominees just before New Years' Eve, and they reconvened this week to vote on their year-end favorites. Also, the Iowa Film... More...
January 10, 2006:
Online Film Critics Offer Their Annual Nominations
The OFCS, which is hosted right here at Rotten Tomatoes and (full disclosure) includes yours truly as a member, announced their year-end nominations yesterday ... and we hope... More...
January 03, 2006:
Chicago Critics Announce Their Nominations
Thanks to Movie City News for sharing the scoop on the Windy City critics and their favorite flicks of 2005.The Chicago film journalists will announce their year-end winners on... More...
December 21, 2005:
Southeastern Critics Chime in With Their Picks
The 2005 Southeastern Film Critics Association Awards announced their annual awards on Monday, Dec. 19, in Atlanta, Ga. Forty-two members in nine states (Alabama, Arkansas,... More...
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