Happy End

3.00
    Happy End
    2017

    Synopsis

    A well-to-do French family living in Calais deal with a series of setbacks and crises while paying little attention to the grim conditions in the refugee camps within a few miles of their home.

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    Cast

    • Isabelle HuppertAnne Laurent
    • Jean-Louis TrintignantGeorges Laurent
    • Mathieu KassovitzThomas Laurent
    • Fantine HarduinÉve Laurent
    • Franz RogowskiPierre Laurent
    • Laura VerlindenAnaïs Laurent
    • Toby JonesLawrence Bradshaw
    • Aurélia PetitNathalie
    • Hille PerlThe Gambist
    • Hassam GhancyRachid

    Recommendations

    • 100

      The Guardian

      It is not a new direction for this film-maker, admittedly, but an existing direction pursued with the same dazzling inspiration as ever. It is also as gripping as a satanically inspired soap opera, a dynasty of lost souls.
    • 100

      The Playlist

      As an austere and darkly comic family drama, and a scathing commentary about the kind of world our children are living in, Happy End is stunning cinema
    • 91

      IndieWire

      Rather than smothering the material in bad vibes, the filmmaker uses them to gradually reveal a fascinating world in which anger and resentment becomes the only weapon any of these people know how to wield.
    • 80

      CineVue

      Happy End may be something of a greatest hits mixtape, but it's also an arresting offering.
    • 75

      The Film Stage

      A major issue is that the characterizations don’t reach very deep and in the absence of a robust context or involving narrative, it’s actually the references to Haneke’s previous films that flesh out what is otherwise a rather perfunctory condemnation of the bourgeoisie equipped with the usual symbolic connotations.
    • 70

      Vox

      Most good films rely on their audiences to connect the dots a little, but Happy End is all dots, with none of the lines drawn in at all. The meaning is there, but you have to dig for it in the everyday events of a family’s life.
    • 70

      The Hollywood Reporter

      Even admitting that films like Cache (Hidden), The White Ribbon and Amour have raised the bar higher and higher, Happy End feels like it’s pulling its punches and not in their league. For one thing, it’s hard to pin down the theme of the piece.
    • 70

      New York Magazine (Vulture)

      Haneke’s integration of the ways we communicate and conduct our lives via phone and laptop feels uniquely effective.

    Loved by

    • Des Essaims