Ariel Dorfman's play Death and the Maiden and Roman Polanski's movie of the same name lead the audience to believe that Paulina's accusations. Dorfman's use of sound directions and spare set directions create an atmosphere where the audience must use their imaginations, a technique that Polanski also follows. In this moody and isolated world, the audience comes to accept the man as Paulina's accuser. While Dorfman and Polanski create some doubt about the validity of Paulina's claims, this is cleared up relatively early. Ultimately, Death and the Maiden has a lot to teach us about the ability to forgive while still holding onto important lessons from the past.
Dorfman's play and Roman Polanski's movie share a common plot. They are set in a South American country as a democratic regime takes over from a brutal dictatorship. Paulina is a woman who was repeatedly raped and tortured during the regime, who comes to believe that a man who stumbles onto her home is the man who tortured her in the past. While the general details of the plot remain true between the play and movie, there are important differences as well.
Ariel Dorfman is a Chilean novelist and playwright who was forced into exile after Chile's military coup in 1973. After democracy was restored in Chile in 1990, Dorfman has divided his time between the U.S., his adopted home, and Chile. Death and the Maiden was written in Chile during the summer of 1990, as the country made its difficult transition to democracy. It is the story of Paulina Salas, a woman who kidnaps and tortures a man who she believes was her torturer over 20 years previously (Duke University).
Dorman's play seems to support Paulina's certainty that the man who arrives at her door is the man who tortured her 20 years earlier. Further, Roman Polanski's movie also seems to support Paulina's certainty. However, both the play and novel seriously allow the viewer to entertain the idea that the emergence of the man may have triggered a kind of delayed...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now