The central thesis of the film is that for Louis XIV, performance was politics. During his youth, the King faced resistance from the Catholic establishment and a restrictive regency led by his mother, Anne of Austria. By casting himself in elaborate ballets as the "Sun," Louis effectively performed his way into absolute power, using the grace and discipline of dance as a metaphor for his control over the state.
The film also highlights the creative partnership between Lully and Molière, showing how their "comédie-ballets" served as ideological tools to challenge the austere religious traditionalists of the court. Visual and Symbolic Trajectory Le roi danse(2000)
A stumble during a dance marks the end of his career as a performer and the transition into a more distant, rigid monarch. The central thesis of the film is that
Corbiau uses a "breathless pace" and a "blazing color palette" to mirror the meteoric ascent of both Louis and Lully. However, the film is framed by the somber reality of their physical decline. The same feet that carried them to the heights of glory eventually fail them: The film also highlights the creative partnership between
Ultimately, Le Roi Danse serves as a eulogy for a "vanished Golden Age" where art and politics were inseparable. It provides a compelling look at how Louis XIV utilized the patronage of the arts to move the French capital’s cultural center from the distrusted streets of Paris to the choreographed order of Versailles. Le Roi Danse (The King Dances) (review) - ResearchGate
His obsession with rhythm leads to a freak accident where he strikes his foot with his heavy conducting staff, resulting in a fatal gangrenous infection. Legacy of the "Sun King"
Portrayed as a "natural ally" to the King’s early Enlightenment leanings, Lully provides the propulsive soundtrack to Louis’s rise.