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The Return of The Other:
The Specter of Colonialism and the Politics of Guilt
           in Michael Haneke’s Caché




                                Rachel Victoria Richmond
“We all believe we're so fantastically
                                                   liberal. None of us want to see
                                                   immigration laws tightened. Yet when
                                                   someone comes to me and asks if I
                                                   could take in a foreign family, then I
                                                   say, well, not really. Charity begins at
                                                   home with the door firmly shut. Most
                                                   people are as cowardly and comfortable
                                                   as I am.”
                                                                          – Michael Haneke


       The past always returns, either in memory or in form. It can live on the outliers of

consciousness and push its way in until there is no other choice but to address it. In

Michael Haneke’s film Caché, the past comes back for reasons unknown. Perhaps it is

out for revenge or maybe it just seeks acknowledgement of a transgression perpetrated

against an innocent person. In the film, Georges Laurent (Daniel Auteuil), a well off

television host, finds his serene life disturbed by the sudden appearance of videotapes of

his house and violent drawings. Georges suspects Majid (Maurice Benichou), an

Algerian man who came to live with Georges family as a child after his parents died in

the Algerian Massacre of 1961. Georges lied to his parents about Majid and concocted

terrible stories that eventually resulted in Majid being sent to an orphanage. In Caché,

Haneke discusses the power of guilt and denial but he also uses the story of Georges to

explore the complex web of repression and guilt forged by European colonialism and its

negative effects on the colonized. Caché highlights the tension between colonized and

colonizer and what happens when the colonized Other returns. Haneke does this by

encoding his film with a nuanced dialog about the French and Algerians but ultimately,

Caché reaches beyond France to encompass the effects of colonialism and post-
colonialism on Europe and how a system of exclusion and repression victimizes both the

formerly colonized and the colonizers.

       In order to delve fully into Caché, attention must be paid to the history of

European colonialism and the struggle between Algeria and France to bring about the end

of colonialism. The idea of colonialism at its heart is about the commodification of

foreign lands and resources (even people) to bolster the wealth of another country. While

colonialism occurred in many countries throughout time, European colonialism changed

the course of history and ushered in a new era of war, violence, and profit. European

colonization practiced by the major Western powers (Britain, France, Germany, Spain)

eventually fell into distress during the mid-20th century. After World War I,

anticolonialist movements grew in popularity in the colonies occupied by the Western

powers. Algeria, one of France’s most important colonies, agitated for self-determination

but it was clear that France would not allow them independence. In 1954, the National

Liberation Front (FLN) began a guerilla war against France in Algeria.

       Back in France, Algerians led rallies and protests against the French government

while renegade members of the FLN launched terrorist attacks against government

offices. On October 17, 1961, Algerians went to the streets of Paris to protest a curfew set

by the chief of police, Maurice Papon. Papon ordered the police to break up the peaceful

demonstration by any means necessary. The police open fired on the demonstrators,

killing countless Algerians. After the massacre, Papon and the French government

claimed only two Algerians were killed but eyewitnesses estimated that up to 200 people

were murdered. The media went silent and never questioned the official story and for

decades after, the French government suppressed all information about the October
17 massacre and denied any responsibility for the deaths of the Algerians. Eventually

Algeria would win their independence but the damage had been done. The French

refused culpability and even refused to acknowledge Algeria’s successful struggle for

independence.

       In his essay on Caché, “Drawing Trauma,” Guy Austin pays special attention

to the ongoing struggle in France to come to terms with the historical trauma of the

Algerian Massacre. Austin notes that the repression of the massacre eventually turned

into something more palatable for French citizens. He says that in the mid-1990's, France

underwent a period of historical "renegotiation and selective remembering" (Austin

530). In November 1996, President Chirac called for French citizens to be proud of the

important achievements made in Africa through colonization. Even in 2005, the French

government required by law that “school syllabi recognize in particular the positive role

of the French presence overseas, especially in North Africa” (Austin 530). This lauding

of French colonial history without regard to its negative effects is a symptom of what

Austin calls “un passé qui ne passe pas” - a past that cannot pass, a past that cannot

be overcome (Austin 530). In fact, it was not until 1998 that the French government

acknowledged that the Algerian massacre even occurred. Then in October 2001, the

mayor of Paris dedicated a plaque to the Algerians massacred on October 17, 1961. This

move was one of the first admissions of the French government to their responsibility in

the event. The dedication of the plaque was met with fury from conservative French who

felt as though such a move was divisive and even dangerous to national unity. If they

were to accept the negative effects of colonialism and their responsibility in the massacre,

the idea of France as the symbol of everything that is desirable about European society
would be called into question. This dilemma is truly at the center of Caché.

       The process of decolonization affected European countries, especially the

Western powers, in one important way: decolonization allowed the formerly colonized to

move into the same sphere as the colonizer. As Professor John Milfull succinctly states

in his essay “Decolonizing Europe,” “the victims of empire come to dwell in the margins

of the metropolis” (Milfull 467). In Caché, Majid lives in the margins of Paris due to the

denial of a proper upbringing by Georges, the native son. But even further, Majid lives

in the margins of Georges’ memory. It is not until Georges receives the violent drawings

that he remembers Majid and is plagued with nightmares of memories that may or may

not be true. The return of Majid – the Other – into Georges life causes a contradiction

between the identity Georges portrays and the fears that he holds.

               In Caché, Haneke plays with the stereotypes of the Other and the

colonizer, two archetypes bred of the era of colonialism. In the book Unthinking

Eurocentrism, Ella Shohat and Robert Stam argue that colonialist racial hierarchy

presupposes the power and intelligence of the white man. “Whites are the objective ones,

the experts, the uncontroversial ones, those who cause no problems, […] those 'at home'

in the world, whose prerogative it is to create laws in the face of alien disorder” (Shohat

200). This construction is what at first look seems the basis for Georges' character.

In “Deep Cuts,” an essay on Caché, writer Benjamin Ogrodnik investigates the

intricacies of Georges’ character. Georges, Ogrodnik maintains, presents

an “unproblematic identification in a western audience" (Ogrodnik 56). Georges is a

middle-class, white, French talk-show host who “is an advocate of specifically French

high culture, a person who defends, promulgates, transmits, and sustains the qualities of
French civilization” (Caputi 5). In Christopher Sharrett’s review of Caché, he notes the

house of Georges and Anne as being symptomatic of their characters. The home, filled

with books and art “shows less their erudition than the bourgeois appropriation and

administration of the entirety of Western culture - a Haneke preoccupation” (Sharrett 51).

On the other hand, the character of Majid is not fully formed and exists at first as what

Georges wants him to be – a villainous Other.

       As the film progresses, the stereotypes that viewers are familiar with no longer

work. Haneke is able to subvert these stereotypes by contrasting Georges’ logical and

calm façade with his increasingly paranoid and fearful behavior after the arrival of the

violent drawings. The reemergence of the memory of Majid causes Georges' identity to

be called into question. Postcolonial theorist Homi Bhabha states that “the reality of the

formerly colonized presence signals the frailty of the colonizer's identity” (Caputi 10). As

Georges slowly becomes more disconnected from the viewer with his own dishonesty,

the viewer begins to question the idea of Majid as the source of the tapes and drawings.

Ogrodnik states that Haneke eschews conventions of commercial cinema by showing

Georges’ hidden negative traits, whereas more conventional cinema would use the

narrative to “provide an opportunity to reaffirm the moral righteousness of the West”

through Georges (Ogrodnik 57). By showing Georges’ negative traits, Haneke links

Georges to the West’s indifference to the plight of foreign minorities suffering in the

margins of their society and at the same time uses his fractured identity to “refute the […]

accepted authority and legitimacy of western characters in the cinema” (Ogrodnik 57).

       Key to Caché is Georges’ denial of responsibility for what he did to Majid. The

main point of colonialism is the idea of European universalism. European powers occupy
foreign lands not only to profit from resources but to also further their own culture across

the world. Georges, France’s native son, had the opportunity to share the “greatness”

of the French culture to Majid. Mary Caputi, a political science professor at California

State University, finds then Georges’ “unwillingness to extend the privileges of French

society to the formerly colonized” as a contradiction (Caputi 4). She continues by noting

that “such unwillingness flies in the face of colonialism's first principle regarding the

superiority and desirability of French civilization” (Caputi 4). This contradiction can be

linked to the problem of inclusion in the process of decolonization. Now that the formerly

colonized lives in the society of the former colonizer, all the culture and opportunities

promised to him are taken away. The former colonizer takes a protective stance against

the foreigner and labels the culture as only for native citizens and never for foreigners.

       The result of Georges’ actions results in a wide discrepancy between the life

Majid lives and the life Majid could have lived. In Étienne Balibar's book We, the People

of Europe?, he points towards decolonization and the failure of the process of integration

as constructing “systems of exclusion: the divide between ‘majorities’ and ‘minorities’

and, more profoundly still, between populations considered native and those considered

foreign [...] who are racially or culturally stigmatized” (Balibar 8). According to Balibar,

these divisions are “reinforced by the history of colonization and decolonization” and

eventually lead towards violent tension (Balibar 8). Majid’s suicide at the end of the

film can be seen as the violent reaction to a lifetime of alienation and exclusion, a view

supported by post-colonialist author Frantz Fanon’s proclamation that “[violence is] the

expression of alienation” (Zahar 81).

       In Caché, the story of Majid seems to have been forgotten by all the major
players except for Majid. Georges would seemingly carry on his life as usual if not for

the emergence of the tapes and drawings that spark in Georges an unnamable guilt. For

example, when Georges visits his mother and tells her that he dreamed of Majid, she has

no recollection of who Majid was. Georges himself cannot connect the dreams to his

culpability in lying about Majid as a child. However, Majid and Georges are connected

to the representation of both guilt (for Georges) and suffering (for Majid) in the tapes

and drawings. The videotapes Georges receives in the beginning of the film function

to permeate the fortresses of his secure life. The wide shot of Georges townhouse, its

stability, its cold and unwavering eye seem to burn a hole into the façade of normality.

The video is silently accusatory and seems to pierce a hole into Georges’ defenses. The

second images, the drawings open the floodgates of memory for Georges and reawaken

a dormant guilt that he has denied since childhood. Haneke clearly shows what film critic

Asbjorn Gronstad notes as “the capacity of the image to generate both reflection and

guilt” (Gronstad 142).

       Both Majid and Georges are forever bound by guilt and suffering. According to

Frantz Fanon, colonization creates a “neurotic orientation” between the colonized and the

colonizer, with each acting out their own roles (Caputi 6). Neither the colonized nor the

colonizer can escape from the “interlocking suffering of the colonial condition” (Caputi

6). According to Fanon, out of a colonial system, there is no identity other than that

forged with in the colonial setting. Majid must act out his suffering and Georges cannot

reconcile his guilt for that suffering and they can only “face each other without any

chance of reconciliation” (Zahar 81).

       Caché’s elliptical ending bolsters this claim but the argument can be made
that generations outside of the specter of colonialism can forge a new synthesis and a

new society that is free from the unending cycle born of colonialism. At the end of the

film, Majid’s and Georges’ sons meet in front of a school and carry on a conversation

that the audience is not privy to. Roy Grundmann, film professor and author, gives an

interesting read of the final scene. If the scene is to be read as the last part of a linear

narrative, the sons meeting could signify a union “as a result of the conflict, and as a

sign that the new generation wants to make peace and taking their place in the course of

history” thus ending the cycle of their parents’ generation (Grundmann 58). If this “new

alliance” is formed then Haneke’s vision of post-colonialism is one of true equality and

balance (Grundmann 58). Such a synthesis would then have to do away with the labels

of “colonizer” and “colonized” and find a new structure for society that is more than

post-colonial.

                 This reading of the ending of Caché is quite positive and seems a hopeful

view of the direction of European society. However, Haneke seems more concerned

about the present state of affairs in European nations. Caché is more than a allegory

about French-Algerian relations and the national repression of guilt over the 1961

massacre. Unfortunately, Max Silverman seems to teeter on the edge of this assumption

in his reading of Caché. He argues that Caché is a commentary on France as a society

that is “incapable of dealing with difference unless it is strictly at arms-length”

(Silverman 248). According to Silverman, the society cannot accept responsibility for

past events and the only way to break down the walls of indifference is to somehow

infiltrate the society. While that may be true, Haneke’s goals are to investigate all of

Europe as a whole. In an interview, Haneke said, “There are black stains of this sort in
every country, and in Austria and Germany they are brown” (Kamalzadeh). Repression

of national traumas and acts which governments are ashamed of is a universal

phenomena and Haneke uses France as a mirror for which to view all of Europe,

especially countries that were former colonizers. Haneke has also stated that “What

[Caché] is really about is the primal legacy of colonialism and the nations involved

labouring with the consequences. And there is no one solution to this” (Kamalzadeh).

Gronstad sees within the film an exploration of “social turmoil simmering beneath the

pan-national veneer of the ever expanding European Union” (Gronstad 138). The social

turmoil stemming from broken promises of multiculturalism and inclusion in Western

societies that ultimately react negatively towards foreigners.

       However, some critics have found much lacking in Haneke’s argument in Caché.

Historian Paul Gilroy counters that Caché “offers precious little” beyond Frantz Fanon’s

original indictments of colonialism:

           We leave the theatre jolted but with no clear sense of how to act more justly

           or ethically. Instead, Haneke invites his audience to become resigned to its

           shame, discomfort, and melancholia. (Gilroy 235)

However, Haneke does offer his audience more than just shame. In Michael Haneke’s

Cinema: The Ethic of the Image, Catherine Wheatley concerns herself mainly with the

idea of spectatorial guilt. Haneke explores spectatorial guilt in the way of character

identification and an internal sense of mise en abyme. Georges is a well-educated and

successful man, a connoisseur of art and knowledge. The viewer is able to connect with

him at first because he stands for all the things that the average Haneke viewer embraces.

Therefore, Georges becomes the mirror through which the viewers can see themselves.
Wheatley argues that “an emotional experience can lead us to consider our own behavior

and […] learn about ourselves and our standards of living. We discover that […] certain

goals are valuable and we have failed to live up to them” (Wheatley 166). Gronstad

bluntly states that Caché “violates the viewers' sensibilities by [...] rubbing their noses

in the moral insufficiency of their own politics” (Gronstad 140). Haneke calls out the

viewer and the entire society of former colonizing states to see what they have done

and how their lofty goals of multiculturalism and inclusion were in the end nothing but

empty promises. Like Georges, those who laud multiculturalism in one moment, lock

their doors and hide behind gates the next. Fear of the foreign Other contradicts the goal

of inclusion and creates a “liberal bourgeois life” that is “a thin veneer covering archaic

stereotypes transmitted unthinkingly from generation to generation” (Silverman 246).

Shohat and Stam argue convincingly that multiculturalism must be more than inviting “a

few token people of color” to a suburban barbecue. Instead, they say that substantial

multiculturalism “has to recognize the existential realities of pain, anger, and resentment”

- all things that Georges in Caché could not come to terms with (Shohat 358). Haneke

may not outline specific steps one must take to tear down the old frame of mind but as

Catherine Wheatly says, viewers are in essence called to “engage morally [the] film” and

examine their own beliefs (Wheatley 174).

       Frantz Fanon sought in someway to in some way unravel the web of violence and

victimization inherent in the colonialist system. Fanon's technique was to try to “train the

eye on the colonizer in the process of looking at the colonized” (Silverman 245).

Through studying the colonizer, one could expose the fears that they had towards the

untamed Other and how the system of colonization alienated both sides. Haneke's does
exactly this in Caché. Max Silverman states, “[Caché] reverses the gaze of the western

colonizer and exposes the hidden fears and fantasies still at play today in a postcolonial

re-run of the colonial encounter” (Silverman 245). Through this replay of the “colonial

encounter,” Haneke is able to look at many different effects that colonialism has had on

the European mindset. Through his film, Haneke does more than launch an attack against

the failures of European government and the society to live up to the expectations that

post-colonialism laid out. Haneke is able to get the audience to look at themselves and

how they fit into this scheme. And like the tapes that arrive at Georges’ home, the key to

confronting a problem is to infiltrate past one’s defenses and look with an unblinking,

steady eye at what is being hidden.
Bibliography:

Austin, Guy. "Drawing Trauma: Visual Testimony in Caché and J'ai 8 ans." Screen 48.4
(2007): 529-36.

Balibar, Etienne. We, the People of Europe? Reflections on Transnational Citizenship
(Translation/Transnation). New York: Princeton UP, 2003.

Caputi, Mary. "Caché and the Trauma of Citizenship." Centre for Cultural Studies
Research Conference Journal (2007): 1-12.

Gilroy, Paul. "Shooting Crabs in a Barrel." Screen. 48:2 (Summer 2007): 233-235

Gronstad, Asbjorn. "Downcast Eyes: Michael Haneke and the Cinema of Intrusion."
Noricom Review 29.1 (2008): 133-44.

Grundmann, Roy. "Haneke's Anachronism." Unpublished manuscript; forthcoming in A
Companion to Michael Haneke. London and Waltham, MA: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010. 1-
82.

Kamalzadeh, Dominik. "Cowardly and Comfortable" SignandSight. 30 Jan. 2006. Web.
01 Dec. 2009. <http://www.signandsight.com/features/577.html>

Milfull, John. "Decolonizing Europe?: The Colonial Boomerang." Australian Journal of
Politics and History 54.3 (2008): 464-70.

Ogrodnik, Benjamin. “Deep Cuts.” Film International 37.1 (2009): 56-59.

Sharrett, Christopher. “Caché,” Cineaste, Vol. XXXI, No.1, Winter 2005, 50-52.

Shohat, Ella and Robert Stam. Unthinking Eurocentrism: Multiculturalism and the
Media. New York: Routledge, 1994.

Silverman, Max. "The Empire Looks Back." Screen 48.2 (2007): 245-49.

Wheatley, Catherine. Michael Haneke's Cinema: The Ethic of the Image. New York:
Berghahn Books, 2009.

Zahar, Renate. Colonialism and Alienation: Political Thoughts of Frantz Fanon. Benin
City: Ethiopia Publishing Corporation, 1974.

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The Return of Colonial Guilt

  • 1. The Return of The Other: The Specter of Colonialism and the Politics of Guilt in Michael Haneke’s Caché Rachel Victoria Richmond
  • 2. “We all believe we're so fantastically liberal. None of us want to see immigration laws tightened. Yet when someone comes to me and asks if I could take in a foreign family, then I say, well, not really. Charity begins at home with the door firmly shut. Most people are as cowardly and comfortable as I am.” – Michael Haneke The past always returns, either in memory or in form. It can live on the outliers of consciousness and push its way in until there is no other choice but to address it. In Michael Haneke’s film Caché, the past comes back for reasons unknown. Perhaps it is out for revenge or maybe it just seeks acknowledgement of a transgression perpetrated against an innocent person. In the film, Georges Laurent (Daniel Auteuil), a well off television host, finds his serene life disturbed by the sudden appearance of videotapes of his house and violent drawings. Georges suspects Majid (Maurice Benichou), an Algerian man who came to live with Georges family as a child after his parents died in the Algerian Massacre of 1961. Georges lied to his parents about Majid and concocted terrible stories that eventually resulted in Majid being sent to an orphanage. In Caché, Haneke discusses the power of guilt and denial but he also uses the story of Georges to explore the complex web of repression and guilt forged by European colonialism and its negative effects on the colonized. Caché highlights the tension between colonized and colonizer and what happens when the colonized Other returns. Haneke does this by encoding his film with a nuanced dialog about the French and Algerians but ultimately, Caché reaches beyond France to encompass the effects of colonialism and post-
  • 3. colonialism on Europe and how a system of exclusion and repression victimizes both the formerly colonized and the colonizers. In order to delve fully into Caché, attention must be paid to the history of European colonialism and the struggle between Algeria and France to bring about the end of colonialism. The idea of colonialism at its heart is about the commodification of foreign lands and resources (even people) to bolster the wealth of another country. While colonialism occurred in many countries throughout time, European colonialism changed the course of history and ushered in a new era of war, violence, and profit. European colonization practiced by the major Western powers (Britain, France, Germany, Spain) eventually fell into distress during the mid-20th century. After World War I, anticolonialist movements grew in popularity in the colonies occupied by the Western powers. Algeria, one of France’s most important colonies, agitated for self-determination but it was clear that France would not allow them independence. In 1954, the National Liberation Front (FLN) began a guerilla war against France in Algeria. Back in France, Algerians led rallies and protests against the French government while renegade members of the FLN launched terrorist attacks against government offices. On October 17, 1961, Algerians went to the streets of Paris to protest a curfew set by the chief of police, Maurice Papon. Papon ordered the police to break up the peaceful demonstration by any means necessary. The police open fired on the demonstrators, killing countless Algerians. After the massacre, Papon and the French government claimed only two Algerians were killed but eyewitnesses estimated that up to 200 people were murdered. The media went silent and never questioned the official story and for decades after, the French government suppressed all information about the October
  • 4. 17 massacre and denied any responsibility for the deaths of the Algerians. Eventually Algeria would win their independence but the damage had been done. The French refused culpability and even refused to acknowledge Algeria’s successful struggle for independence. In his essay on Caché, “Drawing Trauma,” Guy Austin pays special attention to the ongoing struggle in France to come to terms with the historical trauma of the Algerian Massacre. Austin notes that the repression of the massacre eventually turned into something more palatable for French citizens. He says that in the mid-1990's, France underwent a period of historical "renegotiation and selective remembering" (Austin 530). In November 1996, President Chirac called for French citizens to be proud of the important achievements made in Africa through colonization. Even in 2005, the French government required by law that “school syllabi recognize in particular the positive role of the French presence overseas, especially in North Africa” (Austin 530). This lauding of French colonial history without regard to its negative effects is a symptom of what Austin calls “un passé qui ne passe pas” - a past that cannot pass, a past that cannot be overcome (Austin 530). In fact, it was not until 1998 that the French government acknowledged that the Algerian massacre even occurred. Then in October 2001, the mayor of Paris dedicated a plaque to the Algerians massacred on October 17, 1961. This move was one of the first admissions of the French government to their responsibility in the event. The dedication of the plaque was met with fury from conservative French who felt as though such a move was divisive and even dangerous to national unity. If they were to accept the negative effects of colonialism and their responsibility in the massacre, the idea of France as the symbol of everything that is desirable about European society
  • 5. would be called into question. This dilemma is truly at the center of Caché. The process of decolonization affected European countries, especially the Western powers, in one important way: decolonization allowed the formerly colonized to move into the same sphere as the colonizer. As Professor John Milfull succinctly states in his essay “Decolonizing Europe,” “the victims of empire come to dwell in the margins of the metropolis” (Milfull 467). In Caché, Majid lives in the margins of Paris due to the denial of a proper upbringing by Georges, the native son. But even further, Majid lives in the margins of Georges’ memory. It is not until Georges receives the violent drawings that he remembers Majid and is plagued with nightmares of memories that may or may not be true. The return of Majid – the Other – into Georges life causes a contradiction between the identity Georges portrays and the fears that he holds. In Caché, Haneke plays with the stereotypes of the Other and the colonizer, two archetypes bred of the era of colonialism. In the book Unthinking Eurocentrism, Ella Shohat and Robert Stam argue that colonialist racial hierarchy presupposes the power and intelligence of the white man. “Whites are the objective ones, the experts, the uncontroversial ones, those who cause no problems, […] those 'at home' in the world, whose prerogative it is to create laws in the face of alien disorder” (Shohat 200). This construction is what at first look seems the basis for Georges' character. In “Deep Cuts,” an essay on Caché, writer Benjamin Ogrodnik investigates the intricacies of Georges’ character. Georges, Ogrodnik maintains, presents an “unproblematic identification in a western audience" (Ogrodnik 56). Georges is a middle-class, white, French talk-show host who “is an advocate of specifically French high culture, a person who defends, promulgates, transmits, and sustains the qualities of
  • 6. French civilization” (Caputi 5). In Christopher Sharrett’s review of Caché, he notes the house of Georges and Anne as being symptomatic of their characters. The home, filled with books and art “shows less their erudition than the bourgeois appropriation and administration of the entirety of Western culture - a Haneke preoccupation” (Sharrett 51). On the other hand, the character of Majid is not fully formed and exists at first as what Georges wants him to be – a villainous Other. As the film progresses, the stereotypes that viewers are familiar with no longer work. Haneke is able to subvert these stereotypes by contrasting Georges’ logical and calm façade with his increasingly paranoid and fearful behavior after the arrival of the violent drawings. The reemergence of the memory of Majid causes Georges' identity to be called into question. Postcolonial theorist Homi Bhabha states that “the reality of the formerly colonized presence signals the frailty of the colonizer's identity” (Caputi 10). As Georges slowly becomes more disconnected from the viewer with his own dishonesty, the viewer begins to question the idea of Majid as the source of the tapes and drawings. Ogrodnik states that Haneke eschews conventions of commercial cinema by showing Georges’ hidden negative traits, whereas more conventional cinema would use the narrative to “provide an opportunity to reaffirm the moral righteousness of the West” through Georges (Ogrodnik 57). By showing Georges’ negative traits, Haneke links Georges to the West’s indifference to the plight of foreign minorities suffering in the margins of their society and at the same time uses his fractured identity to “refute the […] accepted authority and legitimacy of western characters in the cinema” (Ogrodnik 57). Key to Caché is Georges’ denial of responsibility for what he did to Majid. The main point of colonialism is the idea of European universalism. European powers occupy
  • 7. foreign lands not only to profit from resources but to also further their own culture across the world. Georges, France’s native son, had the opportunity to share the “greatness” of the French culture to Majid. Mary Caputi, a political science professor at California State University, finds then Georges’ “unwillingness to extend the privileges of French society to the formerly colonized” as a contradiction (Caputi 4). She continues by noting that “such unwillingness flies in the face of colonialism's first principle regarding the superiority and desirability of French civilization” (Caputi 4). This contradiction can be linked to the problem of inclusion in the process of decolonization. Now that the formerly colonized lives in the society of the former colonizer, all the culture and opportunities promised to him are taken away. The former colonizer takes a protective stance against the foreigner and labels the culture as only for native citizens and never for foreigners. The result of Georges’ actions results in a wide discrepancy between the life Majid lives and the life Majid could have lived. In Étienne Balibar's book We, the People of Europe?, he points towards decolonization and the failure of the process of integration as constructing “systems of exclusion: the divide between ‘majorities’ and ‘minorities’ and, more profoundly still, between populations considered native and those considered foreign [...] who are racially or culturally stigmatized” (Balibar 8). According to Balibar, these divisions are “reinforced by the history of colonization and decolonization” and eventually lead towards violent tension (Balibar 8). Majid’s suicide at the end of the film can be seen as the violent reaction to a lifetime of alienation and exclusion, a view supported by post-colonialist author Frantz Fanon’s proclamation that “[violence is] the expression of alienation” (Zahar 81). In Caché, the story of Majid seems to have been forgotten by all the major
  • 8. players except for Majid. Georges would seemingly carry on his life as usual if not for the emergence of the tapes and drawings that spark in Georges an unnamable guilt. For example, when Georges visits his mother and tells her that he dreamed of Majid, she has no recollection of who Majid was. Georges himself cannot connect the dreams to his culpability in lying about Majid as a child. However, Majid and Georges are connected to the representation of both guilt (for Georges) and suffering (for Majid) in the tapes and drawings. The videotapes Georges receives in the beginning of the film function to permeate the fortresses of his secure life. The wide shot of Georges townhouse, its stability, its cold and unwavering eye seem to burn a hole into the façade of normality. The video is silently accusatory and seems to pierce a hole into Georges’ defenses. The second images, the drawings open the floodgates of memory for Georges and reawaken a dormant guilt that he has denied since childhood. Haneke clearly shows what film critic Asbjorn Gronstad notes as “the capacity of the image to generate both reflection and guilt” (Gronstad 142). Both Majid and Georges are forever bound by guilt and suffering. According to Frantz Fanon, colonization creates a “neurotic orientation” between the colonized and the colonizer, with each acting out their own roles (Caputi 6). Neither the colonized nor the colonizer can escape from the “interlocking suffering of the colonial condition” (Caputi 6). According to Fanon, out of a colonial system, there is no identity other than that forged with in the colonial setting. Majid must act out his suffering and Georges cannot reconcile his guilt for that suffering and they can only “face each other without any chance of reconciliation” (Zahar 81). Caché’s elliptical ending bolsters this claim but the argument can be made
  • 9. that generations outside of the specter of colonialism can forge a new synthesis and a new society that is free from the unending cycle born of colonialism. At the end of the film, Majid’s and Georges’ sons meet in front of a school and carry on a conversation that the audience is not privy to. Roy Grundmann, film professor and author, gives an interesting read of the final scene. If the scene is to be read as the last part of a linear narrative, the sons meeting could signify a union “as a result of the conflict, and as a sign that the new generation wants to make peace and taking their place in the course of history” thus ending the cycle of their parents’ generation (Grundmann 58). If this “new alliance” is formed then Haneke’s vision of post-colonialism is one of true equality and balance (Grundmann 58). Such a synthesis would then have to do away with the labels of “colonizer” and “colonized” and find a new structure for society that is more than post-colonial. This reading of the ending of Caché is quite positive and seems a hopeful view of the direction of European society. However, Haneke seems more concerned about the present state of affairs in European nations. Caché is more than a allegory about French-Algerian relations and the national repression of guilt over the 1961 massacre. Unfortunately, Max Silverman seems to teeter on the edge of this assumption in his reading of Caché. He argues that Caché is a commentary on France as a society that is “incapable of dealing with difference unless it is strictly at arms-length” (Silverman 248). According to Silverman, the society cannot accept responsibility for past events and the only way to break down the walls of indifference is to somehow infiltrate the society. While that may be true, Haneke’s goals are to investigate all of Europe as a whole. In an interview, Haneke said, “There are black stains of this sort in
  • 10. every country, and in Austria and Germany they are brown” (Kamalzadeh). Repression of national traumas and acts which governments are ashamed of is a universal phenomena and Haneke uses France as a mirror for which to view all of Europe, especially countries that were former colonizers. Haneke has also stated that “What [Caché] is really about is the primal legacy of colonialism and the nations involved labouring with the consequences. And there is no one solution to this” (Kamalzadeh). Gronstad sees within the film an exploration of “social turmoil simmering beneath the pan-national veneer of the ever expanding European Union” (Gronstad 138). The social turmoil stemming from broken promises of multiculturalism and inclusion in Western societies that ultimately react negatively towards foreigners. However, some critics have found much lacking in Haneke’s argument in Caché. Historian Paul Gilroy counters that Caché “offers precious little” beyond Frantz Fanon’s original indictments of colonialism: We leave the theatre jolted but with no clear sense of how to act more justly or ethically. Instead, Haneke invites his audience to become resigned to its shame, discomfort, and melancholia. (Gilroy 235) However, Haneke does offer his audience more than just shame. In Michael Haneke’s Cinema: The Ethic of the Image, Catherine Wheatley concerns herself mainly with the idea of spectatorial guilt. Haneke explores spectatorial guilt in the way of character identification and an internal sense of mise en abyme. Georges is a well-educated and successful man, a connoisseur of art and knowledge. The viewer is able to connect with him at first because he stands for all the things that the average Haneke viewer embraces. Therefore, Georges becomes the mirror through which the viewers can see themselves.
  • 11. Wheatley argues that “an emotional experience can lead us to consider our own behavior and […] learn about ourselves and our standards of living. We discover that […] certain goals are valuable and we have failed to live up to them” (Wheatley 166). Gronstad bluntly states that Caché “violates the viewers' sensibilities by [...] rubbing their noses in the moral insufficiency of their own politics” (Gronstad 140). Haneke calls out the viewer and the entire society of former colonizing states to see what they have done and how their lofty goals of multiculturalism and inclusion were in the end nothing but empty promises. Like Georges, those who laud multiculturalism in one moment, lock their doors and hide behind gates the next. Fear of the foreign Other contradicts the goal of inclusion and creates a “liberal bourgeois life” that is “a thin veneer covering archaic stereotypes transmitted unthinkingly from generation to generation” (Silverman 246). Shohat and Stam argue convincingly that multiculturalism must be more than inviting “a few token people of color” to a suburban barbecue. Instead, they say that substantial multiculturalism “has to recognize the existential realities of pain, anger, and resentment” - all things that Georges in Caché could not come to terms with (Shohat 358). Haneke may not outline specific steps one must take to tear down the old frame of mind but as Catherine Wheatly says, viewers are in essence called to “engage morally [the] film” and examine their own beliefs (Wheatley 174). Frantz Fanon sought in someway to in some way unravel the web of violence and victimization inherent in the colonialist system. Fanon's technique was to try to “train the eye on the colonizer in the process of looking at the colonized” (Silverman 245). Through studying the colonizer, one could expose the fears that they had towards the untamed Other and how the system of colonization alienated both sides. Haneke's does
  • 12. exactly this in Caché. Max Silverman states, “[Caché] reverses the gaze of the western colonizer and exposes the hidden fears and fantasies still at play today in a postcolonial re-run of the colonial encounter” (Silverman 245). Through this replay of the “colonial encounter,” Haneke is able to look at many different effects that colonialism has had on the European mindset. Through his film, Haneke does more than launch an attack against the failures of European government and the society to live up to the expectations that post-colonialism laid out. Haneke is able to get the audience to look at themselves and how they fit into this scheme. And like the tapes that arrive at Georges’ home, the key to confronting a problem is to infiltrate past one’s defenses and look with an unblinking, steady eye at what is being hidden.
  • 13. Bibliography: Austin, Guy. "Drawing Trauma: Visual Testimony in Caché and J'ai 8 ans." Screen 48.4 (2007): 529-36. Balibar, Etienne. We, the People of Europe? Reflections on Transnational Citizenship (Translation/Transnation). New York: Princeton UP, 2003. Caputi, Mary. "Caché and the Trauma of Citizenship." Centre for Cultural Studies Research Conference Journal (2007): 1-12. Gilroy, Paul. "Shooting Crabs in a Barrel." Screen. 48:2 (Summer 2007): 233-235 Gronstad, Asbjorn. "Downcast Eyes: Michael Haneke and the Cinema of Intrusion." Noricom Review 29.1 (2008): 133-44. Grundmann, Roy. "Haneke's Anachronism." Unpublished manuscript; forthcoming in A Companion to Michael Haneke. London and Waltham, MA: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010. 1- 82. Kamalzadeh, Dominik. "Cowardly and Comfortable" SignandSight. 30 Jan. 2006. Web. 01 Dec. 2009. <http://www.signandsight.com/features/577.html> Milfull, John. "Decolonizing Europe?: The Colonial Boomerang." Australian Journal of Politics and History 54.3 (2008): 464-70. Ogrodnik, Benjamin. “Deep Cuts.” Film International 37.1 (2009): 56-59. Sharrett, Christopher. “Caché,” Cineaste, Vol. XXXI, No.1, Winter 2005, 50-52. Shohat, Ella and Robert Stam. Unthinking Eurocentrism: Multiculturalism and the Media. New York: Routledge, 1994. Silverman, Max. "The Empire Looks Back." Screen 48.2 (2007): 245-49. Wheatley, Catherine. Michael Haneke's Cinema: The Ethic of the Image. New York: Berghahn Books, 2009. Zahar, Renate. Colonialism and Alienation: Political Thoughts of Frantz Fanon. Benin City: Ethiopia Publishing Corporation, 1974.