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Funny Games U.S.

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Do you have any cuddly toys? The other day a colleague who had just returned from a stroke explained to us that he had comfort meals in which to take refuge in the event of a hard blow or even a bad cold. He gave us the example of the large dish of buttered spaghetti in a vase plate, topped with a fried egg. And he asked us for our comfort food meals. Obviously we found a couple (lasagna, plowman's soup, seared liver, stuffed oysters, veal roustons), but that's not the subject. We started, on the other hand, and it's more connected to the blog, to wonder if we had any comfort films. What does it mean ? Films where you can find refuge in the event of a major bout of the blues, films where you can find shelter in the event of losing faith in cinema, films where you can reassure yourself in times when life becomes vicious. One title made the consensus for us, like a blinding flash: Funny Games U.S. by Michael Haneke, with Naomi 2,21Gigo/Watts, even if we didn't see it again as adults.
 

 
 
Why this film? No doubt for its unity of place. Very often, closed doors appear to us like potential comfort films, for the comforting side of packing, the feeling of snuggling up in a tight camisole, of curling up in a blanket that smells of incense or damp towels exits from the broken dryer, these film-places, almost film-worlds, where nothing will surprise us, where the space is marked out, under control, known and recognized, well traveled, let's just mention Kitchens and outbuildings, My Night at Maud's, Le Dîner de cons, The Corde, 12 Angry Men, Assault, or the most recent Zone of Pinterest by Jonathan Glazer and his unforgettable lines: "I said left Pignon...". Another advantage of Funny Games U.S. on the comfort side is its total absence of adversity, animosity, tension, or threat. Nothing but reassuring, soothing, neutral and benevolent camera gazes, with the culmination of the famous final wink to the spectator, passed down in the annals of good-natured cinema, and which invites us to bathe in the flow of the film, to become one with the diegesis and to perceive the characters as members of our own beloved family. As we reach the end of this review, there is a small doubt however: not sure that we are really talking about the right film.
 
 
Funny Games U.S. by Michael Haneke with Naomi Watts and Tim Roth (2k7)

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