Amour (2012) May 2026
The film follows Georges and Anne, a retired couple of piano teachers living in a spacious, book-filled Parisian apartment. Their world is one of high culture and mutual respect until Anne suffers a series of strokes that leave her physically paralyzed and mentally retreating. From this point, the apartment transforms from a sanctuary into a claustrophobic stage where the drama of caregiving unfolds.
The film’s controversial conclusion is the ultimate extension of this devotion. In Georges’ eyes, his final act is not one of cruelty, but a desperate, final mercy—a way to release Anne from a body that has become a prison. It is a testament to Haneke’s skill that such a harrowing act is presented as a logical, albeit tragic, culmination of a lifetime of shared affection. Amour (2012)
Michael Haneke’s Amour (2012) is not a film about the romance of youth, but a unflinching examination of the labor of devotion at life’s finish line. While most cinematic depictions of love focus on the "beginning" or "middle" of a relationship, Haneke directs his clinical, yet deeply compassionate lens toward the "end"—the period where the marriage vows "in sickness and in health" are finally, brutally tested. The film follows Georges and Anne, a retired
At its core, Amour asks a haunting question: What does it mean to truly love someone when they are no longer the person you knew? Georges’ devotion is not expressed through grand gestures, but through the repetitive, grueling tasks of feeding, washing, and protecting Anne. His isolation grows as he pushes away their daughter, Eva, whose occasional visits serve as a reminder of how the outside world cannot truly grasp the private agony of a long-term partner’s decline. Michael Haneke’s Amour (2012) is not a film
The Elegance of the End: Love and Mortality in Michael Haneke’s Amour