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The Countess
Kingdom of Hungary, 17th century. As she gets older, powerful Countess Erzsébet Báthory (1560-1614), blinded by the passion that she feels for a younger man, succumbs to the mad delusion that blood will keep her young and beautiful forever.
Release : | 2009 |
Rating : | 6.2 |
Studio : | X Filme Creative Pool, Fanes Film, X Filme International, |
Crew : | Art Direction, Production Design, |
Cast : | Julie Delpy Daniel Brühl William Hurt Anamaria Marinca Sebastian Blomberg |
Genre : | Drama Horror History Thriller Mystery |
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From my favorite movies..
Pretty good movie overall. First half was nothing special but it got better as it went along.
I cannot think of one single thing that I would change about this film. The acting is incomparable, the directing deft, and the writing poignantly brilliant.
All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.
The legend of Hungarian countess Elisabeth Bathory isn't as well known as rumored distant relative Vlad the Impaler (aka Count Dracula), but her story has created much curiosity because of her vicious deeds. Raised by an equally cold mother to be regal, brilliant, brave and unfeeling, she accidentally discovering the curing power of blood in the de-aging process. Looking much older than her 39 years when she begins this reign of terror, she goes between youth and looking aged, always cool in the way she gets the blood from these young virgins, even ordering one to run or be killed in a sudden burst of conscience. Julie Delpy keeps her cool even in the most tense moments, adding a sort of divine right to do what she's doing.The historical aspect of this is fascinating, but I found myself turning my head during some very tense torture moments. There's also her dark, rather evil lover who enjoys being the recipient of sadomasochist tortures. This tries to give the impression that as a woman suppressed in a man's era, she was somehow the victim of a conspiracy and committed these sins because of a lost love. This sends mixed messages to the viewer, especially since they also have her documenting everything she did. The case of Elisabeth Bathory was simple. She was a blood thirty vain power obsessed psychopath whose legend should be a warning about the evils of excessive vanity.
This movie rocks because it manages to be both a lavish, complex period movie and a psychological horror movie at the same time. Julie Delpy does a fantastic job in the role of a complex woman from a brutal period in European history, and her performance somehow gracefully manages to be both sympathetic and monstrous. Bathory is one of history's most prolific and sadistic mass murderers, but historians are ultimately unsure of who she really was, and to what extent she was responsible for the atrocities for which she is credited. Most agree that the whole "beauty treatment bloodbath" thing is a myth made up by later generations to spice up the story, so I was surprised that a telling supposedly rooted in fact ended up going that route, but I loved the idea of a Bathory who is a real person and not just a 2-dimensional fiend. Great sets, costumes, and performances from a well-written script make The Countess an engaging and informative portrait of a woman whose vanity and blood lust have become the stuff of legend.
Beautfull images. Lovely story. Impresive ambitions.A page of Hungarian history. A legendary character and a director who desire to create all in same measure, in same time.Elisabeth Bathory is an enigma. So, only can be authentic slices of her life. Speculations are strange if the clothes are inappropriate. In this case, Julie Delpy lumps details,emotions, assumptions. But remains unfinished mosaic. The desire to create a great movie , build gaps and chaotic spaces. Result - stiffness. The dialogs are artificial. The story is unclear. The myths are ink traces. And the consolation is presence of Anamaria Marinca. The recipes of ambiguous reality is wrong applicate. But the details , the presume atmosphere, the real good intentions are not denied. A film. About shadows of an existence.
I did not regard "The countess" as a historical or a horror movie. I rather saw it as a portrait of a woman. I think the movie wants to show the very destructive effect falling in love can have when a person is very insecure and does not have the ability to reflect its own behavior. In some way that connects to "2 days in Paris" which also dealt with the difficulties of love. The movie also had a feminist side to me: on the one hand it deals with the obsession of beauty (a kind of female issue, also an issue that matters especially to actresses). The countess crosses ethic limits to gain or keep beauty and youth - maybe an analogy to plastic surgery. The murderers committed by the countess are also compared to war: is it better to kill for power than for beauty? A political view is that the countess is not mainly sued because she has committed crimes but because her power is so huge that many people are happy to get rid of her (which is how politic still sometimes works nowadays). Regarding these facets the countess is a parable to human behavior today. It does not want to be a historical movie. I still can see that especially Hungarians are annoyed when they see (and hear)non-Hungarian actors in this movie speaking English (even though the actors are not English) and saying Hungarian names in a non-Hungarian way. As i said before it is not a historical movie and the setting should just be regarded as a frame. I also remember reading an interview with Julie Delpy quite some years ago where she complains about not getting any roles in the US because her accent is "too french". I think mixing actors from different countries she wants to show (or find out) that (or if) a movie can work even though there is an international cast. Regarding the countess as a parable i think that can work. But as my boyfriend does not like watching movies in English we watched the dubbed German version and i really don't know if the accents would have bothered me... Anyways i can see the movie does not really fit a genre so i understand people have troubles with it. I prefer not to think in genres and categories too much - if you do so too I think you will be able to enjoy this movie.