8/10
To break this taboo means death!
8 April 2017
Warning: Spoilers
A stunning docudrama takes the beautiful landscapes of Bora Bora and turns it into a visual paradise to drool over. Absolutely stunning and sumptuous in every way, this shows the every day play and work of the happy go lucky south sea natives and the growing love between a young man and girl, threatened to be separated forever when it is commanded by the order of the local chief that she be made the honorary virgin of the volcano, untouched by man. Any attempts to take away the virgin or deflower her is a curse for all, but young love, even among the superstitious allows no such circumstance to be separated, putting the two on the run for their lives.

Ending up on a nearby port, the two lovers do their best to hide from those looking for them, even having fun in a modern native dance, nothing like they've ever seen before. But the dangers are constantly looming, every glance at them is a risk of being caught, and that keeps this flowing with excitement at breakneck speed. The attractive, barely covered cast does a great job without dialog, the only narration being a series of letters to indicate the passage of time and to reveal the most important if details. This is F.W. Murnau's masterpiece, filled with reminders of the dangers these free loving people faced, through nature, through superstition, through chance. The Kino DVD features an extremely memorable musical score that really helps the emotions of the film tell the story until its completion.
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