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Hukkle

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Hungary · 2002
1h 18m
Director György Pálfi
Starring Ferec Bandi, Józsefné Rácz, Ági Margitai, Eszter Ónodi
Genre Crime, Drama, Mystery

Using almost no dialogue, the film follows a number of residents (both human and animal) of a small rural community in Hungary—an old man with hiccups, a shepherdess and her sheep, an old woman who may or may not be up to no good, some folk-singers at a wedding. A series of vignettes investigating this community uncovers the sublet of a murder.

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What are critics saying?

70

Chicago Reader by

Told almost entirely without words and composed largely of detail shots, Hukkle doesn't quite transcend the gimmickry of its concept, but it succeeds as a bravura technical exercise with some truly amazing images.

80

Variety by Derek Elley

A true original…Beautifully shot, full of droll humor and at 77 minutes never overstaying its welcome.

80

Film Threat by Eric Campos

I love a nice, quiet film. It’s so relaxing and such a nice break from the flashy multiplex fare. I love watching films that you can let just wash over you. The Hungarian film Hukkle provides that comfort, while at the same time coming up with an inventive way to tell a story.

70

Village Voice by J. Hoberman

Deranging a venerable Hungarian tradition of "village sociology," Pálfi employs a bizarrely associative montage to fashion a portrait of a traditional peasant community -- just a midsummer Sunday on Mars.

75

Chicago Tribune by Michael Wilmington

A film driven by an elusive plot buried like a cryptogram under the action. It's a delightfully screwy ethnographic murder mystery, beautifully photographed in translucent naturalistic color.

75

Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert

The film is told almost entirely without dialogue, but is alive to sound; we spend observant, introspective hours in a Hungarian hamlet where nothing much seems to happen -- oh, except that there's a suspicious death.

80

The A.V. Club by Scott Tobias

More than a slight, pleasant oddity, Hukkle shows Pálfi's keen attunement to the sensual possibilities, both in nature and in cinema.

80

The New York Times by Stephen Holden

It works just fine as a sophisticated wildlife documentary with a submerged narrative. But if you enjoy the challenge of solving difficult mysteries, Hukkle presents a tantalizing case waiting to be cracked.

100

Philadelphia Inquirer by Steven Rea

A beautiful eyeful of puckish whimsy and dark-humored mystery, Hukkle (it means hiccup in Hungarian) is a little gem in which nature and humankind commingle, where coincidence and causality collide in a chain of odd, even murderous, events.

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