The Maiden Danced to Death (2011) Poster

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10/10
What a Wonderful Story.
garyoperator28 July 2015
What a wonderful passionate story. When it comes right down to it, family is all we truly have forever. Family should never give up on each other no matter how many years have passed since you last spoke with each other or what the circumstances were that drove you apart. This story is very easy to follow and the sub-titles were very cleverly placed as not to be a distraction. The acting is superb with some incredible Hungarian folk dancing that is truly enjoyable to watch. I love movies with happy endings that leave you feeling satisfied and The Maiden Danced To Death is no exception to this rule. I know you will enjoy watching this story as much as I did. Gary Michael Willens/Los Angeles
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10/10
A Stunning Display Of Cinematic Genius !!!
JoeKulik2 September 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Endre Hules' The Maiden Danced To Death (2011) is truly one of the VERY BEST films that I've ever viewed. It's in my top three.

The storyline is very unique because it is about a Hungarian folk dance company in Budapest preparing for a world tour, and the evolving interaction of the family members involved in the operation of the production. The interaction between the extensive dance scenes and the dramatic scenes is very well done. This is a film in the Meta-Cinema genre because it is a film about another type of performance art, not acting but Hungarian folk dancing. Like a true meta-film, the lines between where the dancing ends, and the dramatic storyline continues is very "blurred", but deliberately so as to use the literal dancing in the film as a metaphor for "the dance of life", the navigational strategies that we all use in traversing the our life path between Self and Other. The editing is very effective in interweaving dance imagery and dramatic imagery to transfer the qualities of dance to drama, and of drama to dance.

The story told in this film is very unique and engaging as well, that of an exiled Hungarian dancer who left his homeland twenty years ago, now to return as a successful, renowned impresario who presents elaborate stage productions worldwide. For reasons that become clear as the story unfolds, this impresario returns home to help his brother promote the local family run folk dance company onto the world stage. The stunning coup de theatre is when the impresario dramatically reveals documents to his brother in front of the whole dance company that prove that the it was the brother himself who secretly informed on him years ago, and was effectively the cause for his expulsion from his homeland.

The cinematography and editing is just stunning, but not because it involves the use of radical, or even risky methods. Indeed, the cinematographic and editing techniques used in this film are relatively mundane. But the application of these well worn cinematic techniques is done with such a delicate understanding of how best to put them to effective use in a film of this sort.

Endre Hules, the writer, director, and lead actor in this film is truly a genius, and I hope to view more of this auteur's work in the near future.

20 Stars !!!
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