^ Fair point. Although it's worth mentioning that shows that feature magical girls getting hurt, killed and deceived are as old as the genre itself, and Urobuchi's take on magical girls isn't anywhere near as original or groundbreaking as many fans believe (Phantom Thief Jeanne did the 'your familiar is actually evil all along' thing way back in the 90s, and the TV tropes page on Magical Girl Deconstructions lists various other examples that predated Madoka). This, ironically enough, would made Madoka closer to the 'copycats' than the originators (although it's definitely better than some of the shows it inspired). Starlight is less of a deconstruction of a deconstruction and more of a metatheatrical glimpse into the nature of tragic narratives themselves, done from an extremely clever audience-centric perspective that dresses itself up as an allegory.
If you're looking for a 'deconstruction' of Madoka, I'd say Yuki Yuna Is A Hero does an excellent job in more ways than I can describe here, featuring a protagonist whose character arc is the polar opposite of Madoka's- she's a popular, well-adjusted kid who serves as the perfect magical girl and gets the chance to become a god, but hates the prospect of self-sacrifice and ends up just wanting to go home instead of becoming a martyr, along with a Kyubey-parallel that actually undergoes character development to the point where it sacrifices itself to save the magical girls instead of serving as an antagonist.