A short excerpt from the booklet essay by Peter Hames.
      
      
      Red Psalm is based around a series of peasant uprisings that  occurred between 1890 and 1910 after the founding of the Social Democratic  Party. Jancsó and Hernádi were also influenced by the views of the historian  Desző Nagy, who argued that songs, dances, and popular folklore had formed an  important part in these risings. The original title of the film translates as  The People Still Demand, taken from a line from a poem by Sándor Petöfi.  Petöfi (1823-49) had promoted the idea that  the peasantry were the most significant part of the nation, called attention to  the conditions of serfdom, and suggested a culture based on folklore.
 Ideologically, Jancsó has linked himself to the traditions  of ‘revolutionary’ film-making by rejecting the traditional story film.  “A story, if the film is a good one, carries  the spectator away on its wings, it is an evasion”.  Jancsó’s films, on the contrary, encourage an  active engagement.  “…while the film is  being projected the spectator racks his brains trying to order the things he is  seeing, he sees himself obliged to, he is active” (Jancsó).  He also saw his style as being particularly  attuned to the “movement of ideas”.
Unlike many examples of revolutionary cinema, Red Psalm  offers a positive aesthetic experience. It is attractive on a superficial level  in that its men – and especially women – are predominantly young and  attractive, colour is used with clarity and purity, and the dances and songs,  regardless of their nominal subjects, are consistently invigorating. The film’s  walking choreography presents a variety of dramatic shapes – the geometry of  circles and squares, the links and movements of individuals between groups. The  movement of people combines with the movement of the camera and the apparent  movement of the zoom lens.  “It seems to  me that life is in continual movement…It’s physical and it’s also  philosophical: the contradiction is founded on movement, the movement of ideas,  the movement of the masses…A man also is always surrounded, threatened by  oppression: the camera movements I create suggest that too”. (Jancsó)  Yvette Biró, who worked as dramaturgist on  the film, noted in reference to Red Psalm: “Jancsó’s pictorial style might be  characterised as calligraphic, entailing a profound tension between  identification and aesthetic distance. A cult of beauty, a consciousness of  form dominates the images.  But the  beauty is always contrasted with destruction and death…The more beauty and harmony  become powerful realities, the more their ruin is painful”. (Biró, 1979)
While Red Psalm now seems in some respects a film from  another era, a time when both sides in the Cold War at least had some vision of  a just society, its relevance has not disappeared. The triumph of  ‘Neo-Liberalism’ and economic laissez-faire, where classes and nations are at  the mercy of international market speculation, where international corporations  hold more wealth than nation states, has created a new brand of oppression.  Commenting on the transition from ‘Communism’ post-1989, Jancsó noted the sense  of rejuvenation following the departure of the Russians – but also somewhat  surprisingly that the ‘greatness’ of the transition lay in the fact that it “…  showed us the world as it really is. Eighty per cent of humans live under the  poverty level, the rest, twenty per cent, own and control everything. Under the  previous regime, we did not have a chance to experience this in its raw  brutality” (Jancsó, 2011). Towards the end of Red Psalm, one of the characters  remarks, “I know that we cannot achieve our aims”.  Nonetheless, one might argue, the hopes, the  dreams, and the sacrifices continue to offer the prospect of change.
Peter Hames’ complete essay, from which this excerpt is taken, appears in the booklet which accompanies the DVD release.

Essay
	      
	      A short excerpt  from the booklet
	      
	      DVD Reviews
          MovieMail by Michael Brooke
	      DVD Beaver by Gary W. Tooze
	      Arts Desk by Jasper Rees
	      Socialist Worker by Jack Farmer
	      E-Film Blog by Michael Ewins
	      DVD Outsider by L K Weston
	      SubtitledOnline by Colin John Gardner
	      Sight & Sound by Jonathan Romney
	      Digital Fix by Clydefro Jones
	      Bright Lights        
Film Reviews
          Kinoblog
            Cinepassion
            Chicago Reader (Jonathan Rosenbaum)
              Cine File
          New York Times
          Pacific Cinematheque
        San Francisco Film Festival 
Connections
          (i)  Raymond Durgnat on Red Psalm 
          (ii)  Interview with Jancsó at Kinoeye
          (iii) Interview with writer Gyula Hernádi 
          (iv) Cinematographer János Kende inteviewed
          (v) Friedrich Engels: The Magyar Struggle
          (vi) Jancsó's Hungarian website
        
