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.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
The Hollywood Reporter by Deborah Young
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.
New York Magazine (Vulture) by Emily Yoshida
Haneke’s integration of the ways we communicate and conduct our lives via phone and laptop feels uniquely effective.
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.
The Film Stage by Giovanni Marchini Camia
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.
Happy End may be something of a greatest hits mixtape, but it's also an arresting offering.
Screen International by Lee Marshall
Haneke’s magisterial control of tone, actor and shot is not to be underestimated: there are scenes of quiet, nuanced authority and menace here that, true to form, compel our attention with their glacial brilliance.
The Playlist by Nikola Grozdanovic
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
The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw
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.
The director’s game is level, and typically mischievous, but lacks something - and it’s not just the vicious sting at the end of, say, Hidden.
Happy End is as cold, observational and difficult to approach as any of Haneke's films, in the best way possible. I thought the films approach to representing new technology and our relationship to it pretty novel and interesting. Filmmakers for a while have been trying to figure out how to make text messaging cinematic, and while Haneke's approach might not become the industry standard, I thought it was pretty compelling.