DruidMurphy - Plays by Tom Murphy
White Ribbon

Galway Film Society

White Ribbon

The White Ribbon marks the high point of a journey that Haneke began over twenty years ago with his remarkable first feature film, The Seventh Continent. This latest work, set in a small farming village in northern Germany on the eve of the First World War, is shot in sparkling, iridescent black and white, a film of shimmering surfaces that conceal a much darker reality. True to his style, this reality is hinted at but rarely shown, and it gradually informs every moment of our watching. Haneke has always had an eerie ability to unsettle, and this quality is in full force during the opening scenes of The White Ribbon. Beneath the sun-dappled fields lurks a series of disturbing events recounted by the local schoolteacher: a horseman has a strange accident, a worker is killed in the nearby sawmill, a young boy is kidnapped and beaten, a man savagely takes his scythe to a crop in a field, a barn is torched. This provides the backdrop to Haneke's brilliant and ruthless examination of a society that admits to nothing and hides everything. The brutalizing reality of village life is slowly laid bare. Both provocative and elegantly executed, this is essential viewing – an examination of how violence can perhaps unwittingly take root in a society that ostensibly believes in other values.

Winner - Palm D’Or, Cannes Film Festival 2009

VENUE Galway Film Society
DATE Sun 7th Mar
TICKETS: €8 / €6
Membership/season ticket for €36 /€32
DETAILS: Dir: Michael Haneke - Austria, Germany - 2009 - 144 minutes
March 2010
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8:15 PM
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