Amour (12A)

Film

Drama

Amour_03.jpg

Time Out rating:

<strong>Rating: </strong>5/5

User ratings:

<strong>Rating: </strong>4/5
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Time Out says

Tue Nov 13 2012

Cinema feeds on stories of love and death, but how often do filmmakers really offer new or challenging perspectives on either? Michael Haneke’s ‘Amour’ is devastatingly original and unflinching in the way it examines the effect of love on death, and vice versa. It’s a staggering, intensely moving look at old age and life’s end, which at its heart offers two performances of incredible skill and wisdom from French veteran actors Jean-Louis Trintignant and Emmanuelle Riva.

The Austrian director of ‘Hidden’ and ‘The White Ribbon’ offers an intimate, brave and devastating portrait of an elderly Parisian couple, Anne (Riva) and Georges (Trintignant), facing up to a sudden turn in their lives. Haneke erects four walls to keep out the rest of the world, containing his drama almost entirely within one apartment over some weeks and months. The only place we see this couple outside their flat, right at the start, is at the theatre, framed from the stage. Haneke reverses the perspective for the rest of the film. The couple’s flat becomes a theatre for their stories: past, present and future.

He asks hard questions: what do love and companionship mean when one half of a couple is facing the end? How can we cope? What’s the right way to behave? Can anyone else understand what you’re going through? Is life always worth living? What role, if any, do kindness and compassion play? And what do those words even mean in extreme circumstances?

A winter light and a sense of half-dark, fading afternoons pervade the film. Our only glimpses of the outdoors are seen through the windows of the flat. This is a drama played out under grey clouds. There’s no storm, just gradual changes from one day, week or month to the next. There are hints of threats from the outside. The film opens with a door being broken down; the lock is damaged in an attempted burglary. And Georges dreams of being attacked outside in a flooded corridor. But these are reminders that the real threat is from within: lives are changing, and so too are the meanings of love, intimacy and kindness.

Haneke rejects the idea of death as a communal experience and presents the slow act of dying as intensely isolating. Georges and Anne’s daughter (Isabelle Huppert) and son-in-law (William Shimell) come to visit, but their own feelings and experiences are less and less connected to what’s happening in this apartment. Death creates a fortress, and it feels piercingly true.

Haneke presents the stark realities of sickness – problems of washing, mobility, going to the toilet – but his aim is not solely to present a realistic portrait of the end. More than that, he wants to explore the emotions and instincts felt by this couple – pride, despair, impending loss, empathy and its limits. There are strong feelings at play, but there’s also an intense pragmatism afoot. Georges has made a pledge to Anne: ‘Please never take me back to the hospital… Promise… Promise me.’ Among so many other things, this is a film about loyalty and being true to your word. ‘Amour’ is a staggering, highly intelligent and astonishingly performed work. It’s a masterpiece.

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Release details

Rated:

12A

UK release:

Fri Nov 16 2012

Duration:

127 mins

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Comments & ratings

Rated as: 4/5 (29 ratings)
  • p.s. @ Nadine Lacoste: If you are in Los Angeles, you can see Amour right now at the Sundance Theatres multiplex on the corner of Sunset Boulevard and Crescent Heights, which, incidentally, has been refurbished, is wonderfully comfortable, has a full bar in the lobby, comfortable leather armchairs and sofas in an upstairs foyer, and beautifully-spaced and designed seating. And doesn't allow under 21's in for *any* movie! I'm singing its praises because I just got back from seeing Amour there, and it was my first visit in over a year - terrific place. Amour is also playing at the Arclight Cinema in the Beach Cities, if you happen to live out there.

    Godfrey H Mon Jan 21
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  • Dave Calhoun has got it absolutely right: "staggering, highly intelligent and astonishingly performed work. It’s a masterpiece." Although he misses something with this statement: "Our only glimpses of the outdoors are seen through the windows of the flat. This is a drama played out under grey clouds. There’s no storm, just gradual changes from one day, week or month to the next." We in fact get more than a glimpse of the outdoors, via the medium of the paintings which hang on the walls of the aprtment and which obviously have been acquired over a lifetime together - one of the earliest expressions of Georges' fear concerns a neighbor whose apartment was burgled, the paintings cut from their frames. As, in a sense, Anne is being gradually removed from Haneke's framing of the story. At one moment, Haneke chooses to cut together a montage of the paintings in close up. Beautiful and evocative, even mesmerising, the paintings are all landscapes and are dominated by deep and storm-cloud laden skies that, collectively, evoke the gathering storm in Georges and Anne's lives which Calhoun mentions. A deeply moving and unforgettable film, for *real* grown-ups.

    Godfrey H Mon Jan 21
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • Anyone who thinks this movie is boring, has absolutely no sense of cinema or story telling. It was a wonderful movie.

    Ernest Sat Jan 19
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  • J'habite a Los Angeles CA USA je voudrai savoir ou je peux aller voir ce film. Merci

    Nadine Lacoste Fri Jan 18
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  • @Hanna: My understanding was he died/committed suicide. That part when both of them walked out together to me means that she came back from the dead to"fetch "him so they can be together. It is a great movie for the right to choose how and when you die (with dignity preferably).

    abby Wed Jan 16
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  • I am so confused with the ending as well. Did he die? or did he just disappear??? please someone help explain what happened to Georges?!?!

    hannah Sat Jan 12
    Rated as: 4/5
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  • great movie ............. feelings in this movie speachless ......i have never seen such a great movie in my life ..........hats offffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff

    satyajitraju Wed Jan 9
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • Yes, please explain the ending. The husband seems to walk out of the apartment. Does he disappear--what happens to him? The firemen break into the flat with no mention of the husband's whereabouts.

    Alain Tue Jan 8
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  • Wonderful actors. Beautiful, yet intentionally (and unsurprisingly) disturbing, love story with at times very moving and tender moments; but also some seriously ice-cold clinical ones, especially when peripheral characters appear - reinforcing the sense of isolation and other-wordly estrangement of the two main characters. Needless to say it raises important and uncomfortable questions regarding the treatment (or rather scientifically-managed processing) of end of life in modern societies. Somehow (in my modest opinion) the movie lacks a tiny little supplément d’âme to reach masterpiece status, but it is precisely perhaps the virtue of its imperfections to provide its viewers with ample space to meditate on their personal experiences. This movie will age well.

    DoigtdePoisson Tue Jan 8
    Rated as: 4/5
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  • This must be the most over-rated film of 2012. While it has good performances, it is largely unimaginative and very narrow in taking on its themes of death and existential meaning. Many of the scenes are set up in a mundane, predictable way, and the film shows us little we don't know already. Give me Bergman's Cries and Whispers anytime.

    Gilbert Sun Dec 30 2012
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