Beauty and the Beast
Fantasy, Horror, Romance
Storyline
Julie, the youngest daughter of a bankrupt merchant, sacrifices her life in order to save her father. She goes to an enchanted castle in the woods and meets Netvor, a bird-like monster. As Netvor begins to fall in love with Julie, he must suppress his beastly urge to kill her.
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"I think of all the iterations of the Barbot story, this is probably my favourite. Not least because it is largely devoid of sentiment and has a gloomy sinisterness to it that I found creepy and yet quite emotionally charged. It all starts with the merchant âOtecâ (VĂĄclav Voska) whose daughters could just as easily have come from âCinderellaâ. Two are selfish and venal, the third is âJulieâ (Zdena StudenkovĂĄ) who merely wants a rose from her fatherâs latest travels to fetch the dowry for his other two children. When disaster befalls that journey, he finds himself at the mercy of a mysterious but generous host who offers him food, shelter and treasure in exchange for the one thing he had left of value - a portrait of his late wife. About to leave, he espies a gift for his youngest and thatâs what earns him the violent enmity of his host. He is doomed to die unless one of his girls agrees to voluntarily take his place. When he regales them all with his story and explains he must return, it is the young âJuliaâ who steals out on his horse and offers herself as the sacrifice. The remainder of the plot plays out engagingly as the tormented and the tormentor soon become inexplicably linked and the choices both wanted at the start of their association soon become the last thing either of them want now. The manifestation of âNetvorâ is creatively inspired, and manages to avoid the more pantomime humanisations that other versions have used; the conflict faced by âJuliaâ is delicately portrayed by StudenkovĂĄ and there is something distinctly Gothic about the production design and the organ themes that accompany her exploration of his palace. Perhaps most intriguing of all: I couldnât quite understand why having swapped so selflessly, her father made no effort to swap back! The monochrome photography serves it really well and without any hints of traditional romance, itâs dark, menacing and amongst the best love stories youâre likely to see as it reminds us about the adage of judging a book by itâs cover."
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