Benny's Video Movie Review
Benny's Video Review
"Benny's Video" Overview

Rating: NR
1992
Cast and Crew
Director : Michael HanekeProducer : Veit Heiduschka,Bernard Lang
Screenwiter : Michael Haneke
Starring : Arno Frisch,Angela Winkler,Ulrich Muhe,Ingrid Strassner,Stephanie Brehme
It’s long been a staple of psychological profiling and often debated furiously,
but the assumption that violent movies actually make people violent has some
merit. How could it not, to some degree? I can remember very clearly stepping
out of Teenage Ninja Mutant Turtles in high school and hoping, praying, that
someone would try to jump me on the way back to my car so I could get into some
sort of kung fu fight. Sure, it would have been geeky, spastic kung fu, and,
sure, I would have been beaten senseless, but I was just so pumped up I would’
ve taken on Jet Li. The question isn’t does violence inspire violence. The
question is: To what extent? Where does that influence end?
We’re bombarded almost daily with disturbing news snippets about teens run
amok, filming their attacks gloatingly and enjoying them at parties. Forget
Girls Gone Wild, nowadays it’s Teens Gone Wilding. Is this the end result of a
violent movie culture? Bad parenting? Terrible genetics? All of the above? If I
watched Teenage Ninja Mutant Turtles enough times (I know, I know, it’s a PG
movie with puppets, but still…) would I be transformed into the sociopathic
killer at the heart of Michael Haneke’s Benny’s Video?
Haneke, the incredibly gifted filmmaker who wowed audiences with The Piano
Teacher and Caché, might say yes. And while it isn’t surprising that Haneke
condemns Hollywood and horror movies for dulling the sense of children who
watch violent movies, the casual, almost hackneyed, mode in which he makes his
argument is.
Benny’s Video is the second film in Haneke’s “Glaciation Trilogy”, so called
for the “emotional glaciation” of humanity explored in the films. (The first is
The Seventh Continent (1989).) The film follows the slow but inevitable
trajectory of violence in the life of Benny (Arno Frisch), an alienated but
bright kid obsessed with violent images. He watches gory horror films in his
bedroom, left to his own devices by parents who pride themselves on making sure
he has his freedom. Benny’s most prized clip is the slaughter of a pig that he
filmed himself. Benny watches it repeatedly, playing it in slow motion,
studying the pixels of violent death. He meets a girl at the local video store
and invites her back to his place and shows her some of his films including the
pig killing. He shows her the weapon used to kill the pig (he’s smuggled it
home) and then, with the camera trained on the girl, he kills her. Without any
emotional response, Benny watches the murder of the girl repetitively,
robotically. His parents then fret about how to cover it up.
The message here is simple and the moral couldn’t be any plainer. And that’s
the problem with Benny’s Video. For Haneke no explanation is needed, Benny has
been turned into a sociopath by his consumption of violent images and his
parent’s non-disciplinary approach to rearing him. It’s black and white. The
audience cannot come to any other conclusion. Haneke has decided for us.
Fittingly, we are also never given insight into Benny. He remains a machine,
remote and inert. And in the end, with a character that repellent and a message
so heavy handed, there is no need to commit ourselves to this bitter, merciless
film.
Reviewer: Keith Breese



