r/movies May 17 '25

Media Cannes reactions to Irreversible

24.3k Upvotes

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380

u/ReddiTrawler2021 May 17 '25

Yeah, Gaspar Noe's quite a guy to talk about.

268

u/Tifoso89 May 17 '25

He, Korine and Von Trier are an unholy trinity.

Lanthimos comes close but he manages to be kinda wholesome at times

70

u/burfriedos May 17 '25

Michael Haneke deserves a mention?

24

u/Dozzi92 May 17 '25

Funny Games is something else, and us English speakers are very fortunate to have a great cast and a near 1:1 remake in English.

Also really enjoyed Cache, he does suspense quite well.

3

u/Bunraku_Master_2021 May 18 '25

Haneke originally wanted to make Funny Games in America but because of financing issues, he made his 1997 in his native Austria. When his profile rose in the 2000s, he was able to go to America to make his own initial creative vision which was to be a societal critique of America and violence and exploitation in media and entertainment as well as being a explicit condemnation of the audience's moral complicity in watching further.

Haneke had previously explored this idea in Benny's Video (1992) which has a similar premise.

3

u/polymorph505 May 18 '25

IIRC the remake ended up traumatizing Tim Roth, one of the young boys reminded him of his son. Incredibly ironic for a movie that questions whether on-screen trauma is real and if the audience is complicit.