Michael
Haneke describes the making of Code Inconnu
(Code Unknown) in his usual enigmatic way:
"It's always very hard, impossible even, for me
to sum up in a few sentences this 'thing' (which
ends up becoming strangely complex) on which I
have spent most of my time and energy for the
past year and a half.
"Moreover,"
he continues, "I think that Code Inconnu,
even more so than my other films, resists this
process and is harder to reduce to a single 'theme'.
I think that, by reducing it to its most obvious
ideas the Babylonian confusion of languages,
the incapacity to communicate, the coldness of
the consumer society, xenophobia, etc we
cannot avoid a mere string of clichés."
Sounds
cryptic? Haneke has always felt that his psychodramas
have to be seen rather than spoken about. Born
in 1942, he studied philosophy, psychology and
theatre in Vienna. After working for German television
(1967-70), he went off on his own as an independent
writer-director. In the meantime, he kept up his
other profession as stage director in Austria
and Germany.
Approximately
half of Haneke's self-written telefeatures are literary
adaptations: After Liverpool (1974),
based on James Saunders' play; Three Ways
To The Sea, adapted from an Ingeborg Bachmann
novel; Who Was Edgar Allan? (1984),
taken from a novel by Peter Rosel; The Rebellion
(1993), based on a Joseph Roth novel; and The
Castle (1997), adapted from a Franz Kafka
novel. As for the other telefeatures Big
Garbage (1974), Lemmings I & II
(1979), Variation (1983), Fräulein
(1985), and Testimonial For A
Murderer
(1991) these can generally be categorised
as the psychodramas (or, if you will, psychological
studies of pathological cases) that form his vision
as an original auteur.
Discovered
for Cannes by Pierre-Henri Deleau, Haneke is best
known for his trilogy of psychological studies
presented in the Directors' Fortnight, each dealing
with emotionally disturbed individuals representative
of a morally ruptured society. In these films,
people have lost both the ability and the desire
to communicate the phenomenon of "glaciation,"
as Haneke terms it.
In
The Seventh Continent (1989) deranged
parents lock themselves into their apartment,
poison their daughter and then commit a double
suicide.
In
Benny's Video (1992), self-centred
middle-class parents attempt to cover up a senseless
murder committed by their lonely teenaged son,
who is living a stunted childhood with his camcorder
and has completely lost touch with reality.
In
71 Fragments Of A Chronology Of Chance
(1994), an emotionally disturbed university student
opens fire with a gun in a bank and randomly kills
a number of people he doesn't even know.
When
Haneke topped this trilogy off with a coda, Funny
Games (1997), chosen for the competition
at Cannes, it became a cause célèbre
by virtue of the shock effect that rippled through
the audience and drove the hypersensitive from
their seats. It is the weird tale of a pair of
murderous psychopaths who appear suddenly
on the scene at a vacation villa, where a family
is driven to the limits of an emotional breakdown
before the murders are actually committed
at which point the lunatics move on to their next
victims.
Asked
in an interview whether these films also criticise
the way contemporary reality is portrayed in movies,
Haneke agreed. "It becomes a sine qua non for
every film-maker in the age of media manipulation,"
he says. "I can't take anybody quite seriously
if their work doesn't reflect that. You can't
act as if you were still in the 19th century and
as if reality could be reduced in its entirety.
That's absurd. But that's what approximately 90%
of all directors do. People want to be reassured,
not forced to think. But the purpose of art has
always been to question the status quo."
As
for the inspiration behind Code Unknown,
Haneke responds: "It all started with Juliette
Binoche, who called one day and asked if we could
work together. I've always wanted to make a film
about modern-day migration... as a result of different
factors (though the primary reasons were and are
economic the disparity between rich and
poor). There are already two cities in Europe
where this fact is obvious, and where a truly
multi-cultural society has developed. One of them
is Paris."
Code
Unknown opens on a busy boulevard in the
city, where a crumpled piece of paper drops into
the out stretched
hands of a beggar woman. This is the starting
point for a film that boasts a varied cast of
very different but somehow interrelated characters.
There's Anne (Juliette Binoche), a young actress
who is about to become a star in the cinema. Her
boyfriend, a war photographer, is hardly ever
at home, and his younger brother has no interest
in taking over their father's farm.
Add
to these an African music teacher at a deaf-mute
institute, a beggar from Romania fearful of being
deported and a handful of other multi-cultural
characters, and you are confronted with
so Haneke fears a Babylonian confusion
of languages, the incapacity to communicate, the
coldness of the consumer society, xenophobia and
other movie clichés he labours to break.
Ron
Holloway
|


| Cast
|
Juliette
Binoche, Thierry Neuvic, Sepp Bierbichler |
| Producer |
Marin
Karmitz, Alain Sarde |
| Prod
co |
MK2
Productions (France), Les Films Alain Sarde, Arte France
Cinema, Bavaria Film, ZDF, Romanian Ministry of Culture,
Studio Canal |
| Running
time |
117
min |
| Int'l
Sales |
MK2
|
|
|