The Piano Teacher

2001 Drama

How far is a man willing to go to be with the woman he wants? Erika (Isabelle Huppert) is a veteran piano instructor at a famous music conservatory in Vienna. Erika is highly respected for her remarkable talent and strong discipline, but she's also known to be a harsh taskmistress and does not suffer fools gladly; among her students, Erika's class is considered a highly rewarding challenge, but difficult to weather. Erika seems to get her stern and unforgiving nature from her mother (Annie Girardot), with whom she still lives, and without a husband or a lover, Erika satisfies her strong but frequently perverse sexual appetites through extreme porn videos, voyeurism, and masturbatory practices that sometimes involve pain and self-mutilation. Erika discovers she has attracted the attentions of one of her students, Walter (Benoit Maginel), a gifted and good-looking young man who does not seem at all put off by her icy personality. She refuses to acknowledge Walter's romantic overtures, but when he rises to the defense of a fellow student after a recital, Erika is enraged, and Walter pursues her, finally following her as she storms off to the women's room. Erika abruptly approaches Walter in a rough sexual fashion, but refuses to fully satisfy him until he is willing to allow her to control the relationship. When Walter becomes aware of just how much pain and humiliation is involved in Erika's erotic bill of fare, he refuses to participate, but in time his attraction to her causes him to weaken, and he begins to accede to her sexual demands. La Pianiste was shown in competition at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival, where Isabelle Huppert and Benoit Maginel were named Best Actress and Best Actor, and writer/director Michael Haneke received the Jury's Grand Prize. more..

Director: Michael Haneke

Starring: Isabelle Huppert, Benoit Magimel, Annie Girardot, Susanne Lothar, Udo Samel

Reviews

  • Powerful and outrageous.

    Mick LaSalle - The San Francisco Chronicle

    20 January 2013

  • Seems less like a fictional story than a tour through Freud's forgotten files.

    - The Washington Post

    20 January 2013

  • The Piano Teacher will surely be too strong for some audiences and is best left to those who like films that take big risks and get away with them.

    Kevin Thomas - Los Angeles Times

    20 January 2013

  • A disconcertingly assured tango between tenderness and brutality.

    Desson Thomson - The Washington Post

    20 January 2013

  • There is an old saying: Be careful what you ask for, because you might get it. The Piano Teacher has a more ominous lesson: Be especially careful with someone who has asked for you.

    Roger Ebert - The Chicago Sun-Times

    20 January 2013

Awards

  • Best Film Not in the English Language

    BAFTA Awards (2002)

     
  • Best Non-American Film (Bedste ikke amerikanske film)

    Bodil Awards (2003)

     
  • Christian Berger

    Camerimage (2001)

     
  • Benoît Magimel

    Cannes Film Festival (2001)

  • Best Actress

    Chlotrudis Awards (2003)