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Caché
A married couple is terrified by a succession of surveillance videotapes which they discover on their front porch.
28 November 1944, Vitry-sur-Seine, Val-de-Marne, France
22 April 1963, Versailles, France
25 September 1950, Le Blanc, Ille-et-Vilaine, France
18 December 1974, Avignon, Vaucluse, France
1975, Dakar, Senegal
28 December 1937, Lyon, France
26 February 1953, Saint Lô, Manche, Basse-Normandie, France
9 March 1964, Paris, France
15 April 1982, Uccle, Belgium
6 January 1963, Paris, France
17 July 1948, Paris, France
September 25, 2010
Coming from a guy who sliced private parts onscreen long before Lars von Trier, "Cache" is restrained. But Michael Haneke skillfully, slowly twists the knife on those who would so carelessly forget a decision that forever altered the life of someone else.August 30, 2009
Another step towards replacing facile jolts with compassionate scrutinyFebruary 10, 2006
One thing that cannot be argued is Haneke's ability to attract the best actors in cinema, perhaps by promising to take them places they have never been.June 08, 2008
Michael Haneke's aptly named Caché (Hidden) is the kind of movie that fully engages the mind of the viewer. It's a multi-layered, open-ended thriller, an onion sliced by taut piano wire.March 05, 2011
Hidden is essential viewing for those who like their thrillers with depth, intelligence, and inimitable style.August 20, 2008
Michael Haneke est visiblement un cinéaste qui adore mettre son public à rude épreuve.February 17, 2006
Caché encourages us to look -- and then to look harder.October 10, 2009
Many things are hidden in the layers of this brilliantly clever mystery from Michael Haneke: the truth, the point of view from which the story is told, the political references and, most intriguingly, the ending. Which is not to say you can't find them. BFebruary 09, 2006
Haneke's characters are never easy to like, yet it's impossible not to empathize with their anxiety. It's his mastery of the craft, both visual and sonic, that pulls viewers along in its grip.February 17, 2006
Contrarian that he is, Haneke does a much finer job forcing questions than providing an answer.February 24, 2006
This French film (in bad, washed-out English subtitles) is a quiet chiller. A family's social fabric unravels right before our eyes.February 10, 2006
Haneke's patient, tip-toed assault turns Caché from a little movie about spooked haute-bourgeois media personalities into a sneaky and effective exposé on the artifice of film.