The first and last two long shots explain the origin of the story and leave an open ending, revealing some hope. It is revealed that the source of the tragedy of the story is a long shot in the penultimate scene of the film. In the cold image, George at the age of 6 witnessed Maritt being taken away by the car of the foster home while he was struggling and crying in a low dark corner. Achieved the desired purpose.
The special thing about Cache is the setting of a camera that never existed. The dullness of the whole film brings more introspection at the end. The few highlights come from a joke and a shocking blood.
Matthew Casowitz, who won the Best Director Award in Cannes in 1995, used black and white images to tell the social violence in the suburbs of Paris. Coincidentally, a series of riots occurred in the suburbs of Paris a few weeks after the release of "Cache" in 2005. The perpetrators were Descendants of African immigrants.
I said that the camera did not exist because George speculated that the motive of sending the videotape to the person was not valid. Extortion? mischief? No, all this is just a lie that led George to his childhood, and those injuries he ignored or disapproved ended up in Marrett's self-suspension. The content recorded by the camera should not be what someone did in reality, or be explained from the perspective of God or even God.
It is the hypocrisy of the middle class in George or the selfishness of his childhood. Let's just say that he is selfish. After all, a six-year-old child really has no scheming. But this is still very deadly. Marrett was impoverished in his middle age, and was accused, threatened, and even detained for no reason. All this came from a young friend.
In fact, it was the past that George didn't want to face that had the nightmare years later. He had a clear conscience and said it was so simple. Marret was deceived when he was young, wronged again in his middle age, expelled once, and once committed suicide. It seems that there is no connection, but in fact they are all rejected as a foreign ethnic group. In this way, Haneke’s ambitions It's really too big.
In fact, I want to say more, maybe watching this film does require a certain amount of patience.
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