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71 fragments d'une chronologie du hasard

Original title: 71 Fragmente einer Chronologie des Zufalls
  • 1994
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
9.3K
YOUR RATING
71 fragments d'une chronologie du hasard (1994)
CrimeDrama

71 scenes revolving around a recent immigrant, a couple that has just adopted a daughter, a college student and a lonely old man.71 scenes revolving around a recent immigrant, a couple that has just adopted a daughter, a college student and a lonely old man.71 scenes revolving around a recent immigrant, a couple that has just adopted a daughter, a college student and a lonely old man.

  • Director
    • Michael Haneke
  • Writer
    • Michael Haneke
  • Stars
    • Gabriel Cosmin Urdes
    • Lukas Miko
    • Otto Grünmandl
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    9.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Michael Haneke
    • Writer
      • Michael Haneke
    • Stars
      • Gabriel Cosmin Urdes
      • Lukas Miko
      • Otto Grünmandl
    • 27User reviews
    • 39Critic reviews
    • 71Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 1 nomination total

    Photos45

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    Top cast26

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    Gabriel Cosmin Urdes
    • Marian Radu (Romanian Boy)
    Lukas Miko
    Lukas Miko
    • Max
    Otto Grünmandl
    • Tomek
    Anne Bennent
    Anne Bennent
    • Inge Brunner
    Udo Samel
    Udo Samel
    • Paul Brunner
    Branko Samarovski
    • Hans
    Claudia Martini
    • Maria
    Georg Friedrich
    Georg Friedrich
    • Bernie
    Alexander Pschill
    Alexander Pschill
    • Hanno
    Klaus Händl
    Klaus Händl
    • Gerhard
    Corina Eder
    • Anni
    Dorothee Hartinger
    • Kristina
    Patricia Hirschbichler
    • Sabine Tomek
    Barbara Nothegger
    • Fürsorgerin
    Gudrun Gutt
      Michael Jackson
      Michael Jackson
      • Self
      • (archive footage)
      • (uncredited)
      Johannes Kollmann
        Karl Künstler
          • Director
            • Michael Haneke
          • Writer
            • Michael Haneke
          • All cast & crew
          • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

          User reviews27

          7.19.3K
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          Featured reviews

          aarosedi

          Why is non-participation on the Pascal's wager an automatic "no" bet?

          Mr. Michael Haneke begs the audience to start asking the important questions.

          The film begins with a text of a news item involving a bank shooting incident in Vienna a day before Christmas eve 1993 that left three people dead with the 19-year-old assailant later found to have shot himself nearby.

          What then follows is a series news broadcasts interspersed with scenes involving seemingly random characters while they go through their day-to-day existence: a Romanian refugee who illegally entered Austria seeking asylum, a soldier, an armored van security guard, a college student, a couple having trying to adopt a kid, and elderly man and his bank employee daughter.

          The film is, as the title indicates (and I'll take the filmmaker's word on that), there are a total of "71 fragments" divided into segments that are separated by almost three seconds of black frames. I actually took trouble counting those (because I don't have a life) and found out that--

          The different characters are shown going through mundane activities throughout the film and it gives the viewers an insight to human behaviour and the dynamic between the characters whose connection to the other charcters are more evident than some. They are also seen to be watching these same news broadcasts in their respective environments apart from the segments that solely featured these news items being played on-screen, which in a way connects almost every person in this film.

          Mr. Haneke has a style all to his own. He's a master in evoking fright without necessarily having to show much, this will be apparent near the end of the film, the Haneke genius I'd say, just as gruesome. This is not one of his best work but it stands out on its own for the always-relevant commentary that he wishes to expound.

          The narrative that Mr. Haneke wanted to express could only be realized through a closer scrutiny of the various fragments which eventually points to a far greater tragedy, and he also throws in a fair warning as well. The same thing could also can be said regarding the conflicts around the world. We see the news on TV, the horrific images, the drama, yet something is lacking. What were the events that led up to the tragic outcome that we all get to witness on the screen? Clearly, there are some people who know more than others and the news reporters seem not to be able to get to those people for some reason or another, it is this incompleteness that kind of detaches us, the viewers, from the horror, and there are people taking advantage of other people's silence and rendering them just as complicit to those acts of violence.

          My rating: A-minus.
          7KnightsofNi11

          Challenges everything you thought about film narrative

          If you're looking for something happy, uplifting, and fun then steer clear of this movie. If you're looking for something easy and simple then steer clear of this movie. If you're looking for something that you can watch with half a brain then avoid this movie like the plague. 71 Fragments of a Chronology of Chance is an experimental film from visionary mastermind Michael Haneke. The film is 71 different scenes that highlight small tidbits of the lives a seemingly random collection of people. News clips of war and Michael Jackson are spliced into the film as well, creating a disjointed and difficult narrative that in some ways all ties together, but in other ways stays loose and frivolous. The interpretation of this kind of narrative style is at the viewers discretion.

          If you're at all familiar with Haneke's work then you'll know not to expect anything straightforward going into this film. If you go into this film knowing nothing about Haneke then may God have mercy on your soul. Not really, just be prepared. This is not an easy film to follow being that there seems to not be much to follow. The majority of the film spends its time laying down the various puzzle pieces with very little rhyme or reason to the distribution of the pieces. Towards the end of the film the pieces begin coming together for a fairly anticlimactic ending that reflects the perpetual sadness of a world full of violence, hardship, neglect, and hatred. You'll never miss Haneke's macabre cynicism in any of this films, and especially not this one.

          It's difficult for me to form a steadfast opinion on this film because it is so out there and so difficult to fully comprehend. As always, I respect Michael Haneke for the being the true genius he is. He's created something wholly original and intuitive here, I just can't quite place what it is. There are a lot of lines going in different directions here and they never seem quite seem to meet up. This film challenges the ideas of your typical film narrative and I have to give it kudos for taking such risks and ending up with something that works more or less. 71 Fragments of a Chronology of Chance isn't a film you just watch, it's something you experience.
          7khosravim

          Elephant by Haneke

          A Sample film in 90's about violence and how it improves. Pazzle-like narration with 71 episodes, shows us a story about the history of violence. "71 Fragmente einer Chronologie des Zufalls" has all the signs of a film which could be made in 90's. Haneke is one of the contemporary filmmaker who use the violence scenes to show us how this huge question (why violence?) has no straight answer. 71... is almost look like another haneke's famous film (Code unknown,2000) which both of them are narrating unfinished stories of some journeys. Unexpected final scenes and also, unexpected shocking shots are two icons in this film like another Haneke's films. Haneke's style is like the way Robert bresson made films. Bresson's cinematograph and also Hitchcock's suspense are affected in his cinema. His cinema invites us to watch untold stories about complicated questions of contemporary world.
          7meesvanoosten36

          GOOD

          I must say that I really enjoyed this movie. The subtle exploration of the character in very personal en realistic scenes were executed in the perfect cinematic way (framing, staging, blocking, pacing, editing). The way Haneke used (the lack of) cohesive plot really caught my attention and made me excited about how the story was going to unfold. Though the end was a bit unsatisfying for me. I wasn't drawn enough to the characters to experience a emotional climax through any strong perspective from a character arc. I understanded the thematic exploration but found the climax a bit underwhelming. I'll defintely rewatch to get a hold of more missed details which might immerse me more than my first viewing.
          9braugen

          Haneke has an amazing clarity about people's alienation

          This film is the last in Michael Haneke's trilogy about alienation called "Vergletscherung die Gefühle", and it ends in a violent climax which is a result of the previous fragments that Haneke presents to us. In this film Haneke developed a style that is very reminiscient of his 2000 film "Code Inconnu". It features rather short episodes, and within each episode there is scarcely editing or camera movement. Each episode is divided by a second's black screen, and Haneke often interrupts and ends the episode in the middle of a person's sentence. This is a very economical style of filmmaking, and it certainly demands a lot of the viewers, because you only get the information you really need to connect this episode thematically to the others. Because this is a thematic film, and it is a brilliant, stylish, ice-cold half-misanthropic study of people's lack of ability to perform tender acts with each other. I have never seen people make love in a film by Haneke, except for the masochistic and sad attempts in "La Pianiste". Rather, Haneke shows his characters in situations where they are tired, fed up, irritated or full of hate; quite ordinary human emotions. You cannot blame Haneke for not being a positive director, for he is the only filmmaker working today who can portray and observe his characters so coldly and so unpassionately. And his project seems to be to expose our lack of love and passion for each other, but most of all our lack of ability to tell it as it is. Speak to each other and solve everything, seems to be Haneke's advice, without him really giving it. I never seem to like Haneke's characters, and that is a good thing really. Like fellow German-speaking directors Herzog and Fassbinder, Haneke seems a bit misanthropic in his characteristics. Too many directors try too hard to give characters sympathetic traits, and you just lose interest in the story. "71 Fragmente einer Chronologie des Zufalls" is quite an achievement in filmmaking, and it is a film that will stick with me forever. I will never forget because I never knew why (the incident at the end). That is how I will remember this film, and how many times in real life is "why" the only question never answered?

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          Storyline

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          Did you know

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          • Trivia
            Film debut of Sebastian Stan.
          • Goofs
            When Tomek (Otto Grünmandl) makes himself dinner, around the 20 minutes mark, there's a mirror in the background that reflects the boom mic.
          • Connections
            Featured in Ma vie: Michael Haneke (2009)

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          FAQ14

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          Details

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          • Release date
            • April 26, 1995 (France)
          • Countries of origin
            • Austria
            • Germany
          • Languages
            • German
            • Romanian
            • English
            • Spanish
          • Also known as
            • 71 Fragments of a Chronology of Chance
          • Filming locations
            • Vienna, Austria
          • Production companies
            • ARTE
            • Wega Film
            • Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen (ZDF)
          • See more company credits at IMDbPro

          Tech specs

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          • Runtime
            1 hour 40 minutes
          • Color
            • Color
          • Aspect ratio
            • 1.66 : 1

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