Merry-Go-Round

1956 [HUNGARIAN]

Action / Drama / Romance

3
IMDb Rating 7.7/10 10 1789 1.8K

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Plot summary

In a rural scenery in the throes of difficult changes lives a humble but promising young farmer girl called Mari Pataki. Her father forbids her from seeing the man she loves. The father, above all preoccupied by work on the fields and prospective wealth, decides to give his daughter in marriage to an old but rich man with whom he does business. Land marries land, he says. This seems to be the unyielding rule of the Hungarian peasantry. But the young lover is ready to stand up to any challenge to keep Maris love.


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March 22, 2022 at 12:02 AM

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874.66 MB
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Hungarian 2.0
NR
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24 fps
1 hr 35 min
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1.59 GB
1488*1072
Hungarian 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
24 fps
1 hr 35 min
Seeds 2

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by frankde-jong 9 / 10

Land marries land

"Merry go Round" tells the timeless story of a young girl falling in love with another boy than chosen by her father. At this moment the same story in a slightly more complicated form is told in "The peasants" (2023, DK- and Hugh Welchman).

The merit of the film is however not in the story told, but in the way it is told. Only minimal use is made of spoken dialogue. Most of the emotions are conveyed by way of: facial expression / close ups; camera movements; framing (are characters close or distant in space).

The film is slow paced and every scene gets the time it requires. Every scenes has his function in the plot, but to me two scenes did stand out.

In the first place the opening scene about the yearly carnival. The scene makes very clear that this is THE happening of the year in the otherwise quiet village, the youth making fun and the adults doing business. It is also in this scene that Mari (the girl) falls in love with Maté (the boy) while at the same time Sandor approaches her father about a marriage, laying the foundation for the rest of the film.

In the second place the dancing scene. On the last wedding before that of Sandor and Mari, Maté graps his change and asks his love (still a free girl) to dance. She agrees, ... and how. Much to the chagrin of Sandor the dance becomes ever more passionate, the camera moving along with the dancing couple. This (long) scene reminded me of the famous dancing scene in "Il Gattopardo" (1963, Luchino Visconti).

"Merry go round" was directed by Zoltan Fabri. He is a famous Hungarian director, two of his films being nominated for an Academy Award for Best foreign language film. Until "Merry go round" he was unknown to me. Being a film buff for more than 30 years I still discover new directors every couple of years. That's how rich film history is!

The film was released in 1956, which was also the year of the Hungarian uprising against the Communist rule. This made me wonder if there was some relationship between political activism and artistic freedom in movies the way we saw it in the Czech new wave. This is however not the case. Politcally the film is very correct in the Communist sense.

Lover Maté works for a collective and is for self determinatian in marital affairs.

Sandor and the father of Mari are free farmers. They are very conservative in marital affairs. They treat a marriage as a business oppurtinity ("Land marries land").

Only Mari has real character development. Loyal to her father at first, she finally stands up for her freedom.

Only approximately ten years after "Merry go round" did Hungarian cinema become innovative with directors such as Miklos Jancso ("The red and the white", 1967) and Istvan Szabo ("Love film", 1970).

The character of Maté was played by actor Imre Soos. He passed away a year later, only 27 years old. The circumstances surrounding his dead (he was found together with his wife) indicated a double suicide, but conspiracy theories never went away completely.

Reviewed by christopher-underwood 8 / 10

mesmerising

It is a wonderful film beautifully photographed throughout, at the open credits is a merry-go-round, suggestion of being at a circus but we would have thought it at a fairground and it is mesmerising. The lovely Mari Torocsik stars in a dazzling debut performance and although she seems in love with a farm worker but her father is adamant for her to marry with a wealthy man and it will mean that he will also be better off with 'the Law of the Land'. The story goes much as we imagine but then towards the end it is rather surprising. After the merry-go-round there is another one but there are also some amazing long incredible dancing pieces again with Mari. She was still a student and given the star role in this as she was only 20 and then in 1957 she went to work at the National Theatre in London. She worked at first in the theatre in UK and then TV and film in Hungary, when she was almost always there and made more than 170. I have only seen one of her other films and that was Miklos Jansco's, Silence and Cry (1968) which was beautiful but at the same time rather difficult to understand.

Reviewed by cibyll-1 10 / 10

Masterpiece!!!

I'm from Hungary like this masterpiece. Zoltán Fábri the famous director made an excellent work about the story how the hard working people of Hungary lived in the '50s. Mari Törőcsik is still one of our favorite and talented actress and her partner here, Imre Soós was maybe our best actor at the time. He died young, so I think we must be proud of his energetic acting what he shows us in this movie. The most known words of this year was: "Land marries land". This tells us everything about the life in the middle '50s in our country. The cinematography is wonderful, also the classic Hungarian folk music which we can listen all the time. Maybe nowdays this kind of movie is too slow, and most of the teenagers smiles when they see this. But it was true, and very sad. Life is much more easier in 2008. But our grandparents lived there, and it was not easy. I've loved them telling about the past much more than everything, life is sometimes too short! I hold them in reverence! So, let's go and see this movie because it's a real unique art of cinema!

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