Historical Note

This page was migrated from the original p-nand-q.com site which was last updated in 2015. The content has been preserved exactly as it was, with only formatting updated for modern browsers. Over the coming days and weeks, the content will be reviewed and may be updated for accuracy and relevance. If you find any issues, please contact me.

Difficult Movies -

These are difficult movies.

That shift is the hidden gift of difficult cinema. It reminds us that film isn’t just furniture polish for the soul. It can be a scalpel. Some difficult movies are hard because they challenge our sense of right and wrong. Michael Haneke’s Funny Games (1997) traps a family in a home invasion, then has the killers rewind the action when a victim almost escapes. It’s not just violent — it’s insulting to the viewer’s hope for justice. Haneke isn’t being cruel for sport. He’s asking: why do you enjoy on-screen violence as long as the bad guys lose? What does that say about you? difficult movies

So the next time someone says, “I saw this film. It was really hard to watch,” don’t ask if they liked it. Ask what it showed them about themselves. That’s the only question that matters. These are difficult movies

A difficult movie doesn’t hold your hand. It doesn’t cut away before the worst happens. It lingers on degradation, grief, moral rot. It makes you complicit by watching. And in that discomfort, something strange occurs: you become alert . The usual defenses — irony, distance, habit — fall away. You’re no longer a passive consumer. You’re a witness. It can be a scalpel

Here’s a short reflective piece on the idea of — written for a general audience or a film blog. Why We Need Movies That Hurt to Watch We’ve all been there. You finish a film, and someone asks, “So… did you like it?” And you hesitate. Not because you’re indifferent — but because “like” is the wrong word. The movie didn’t ask to be liked. It asked to be endured .