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Aguirre, the Wrath of God by Werner Herzog
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DVD detailsActor: Del Negro, Helena Rojo, Klaus Kinski, Peter Berling, Ruy Guerra Director: Werner Herzog Brand: KINSKI/GUERRA/NEGRO/ROJO/RIVER Cinematographer: Thomas Mauch Producer: Werner Herzog Writer: Werner Herzog Editor: Beate Mainka-Jellinghaus Producer: Daniel Camino Producer: Hans Prescher Producer: Lucki Stipetic DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Original Language), Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono; German (Original Language), Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround; English (Subtitled); English (Dubbed), Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono Format: NTSC Picture Format: Academy Ratio, 1.33:1 Running Time: 93 minutes DVD Release Date: 2000-10-24 Audience Rating: Unrated Studio: Starz / Anchor Bay
DVD Reviews of Aguirre, the Wrath of GodDVD Review: masterpiece on nihilistic megalomania in the S American jungle Summary: 5 StarsThis is a wonderful historical film about a doomed expedition that is largely historical fact. Finding himself unable to continue, Pizarro sends Aguirre and 40 men into the jungle to search for El Dorado, the golden city. It is a strange venture, encumbered by aristocratic women in sedan chairs and primitive weapons, and seeded by the ambition of founding a new empire. Aguirre takes over by force and leads the men to nowhere, ignorant of their surroundings, renegade, and prey to supposed cannibals. It can only end in obscure death, yet he rants to the end.
What is so incredible about the film is the tone that Herzog and Kinsky achieve, a sense of chaos and impossible ambition of Caesarian proportion, even declaring themselves the founders of a country and assuming they will conquer a continent on their own. As they descend farther into the unknown, Aguirre's insanity becomes undeniable. Then comes murder, blistering rages, and steady loss of men. It is a splendidly frightening journey into one man's obsession with power and riches, the very reason that America was colonized. The men are so primitive, much closer to a medieval than to a modern or even Renaissance mentality. The actors are excellent as well.
This is about as un-Hollywood as you can get. Shot on a shoestring, with a story that ends in annihilation and lack of meaning or resolution.
Warmly recommended. It is truly a brilliant realization of a great visionary filmmaker.
DVD Review: Into the Wild Summary: 5 Stars"Aguirre,the Wrath of God" is a cinematic masterpiece. Masterfully directed by Werner Herzog, Klaus Kinski is perfect as the homicidal,power-hungry Lope de Aguirre. The eerie music of Popol Vuh provides the eerie atmosphere. Despite being set in the vast Amazon rainforest, there is a sense of claustrophobia as Aguirre destroys others and then himself.
"Aguirre" opens with a majestic shot of the Andes as one of Pizarro's expeditions descends. Pizarro designates Don Pedro de Ursua to lead an expedition to El Dorado (the legendary Cities of Gold),accompanied by his mistress Dona Inez,while Aguirre is a deputy,with his daughter Flores. A monk, Br.Carvajal,narrates the story. Though the Spaniards fear Indians and cannibals,the real danger is among them. Kinski has few lines,subtly menacing as Aguirre who longs for power and wealth. Aguirre's few tender moments are with his daughter.
Aguirre's descent into madness is powerfully and subtly depicted. It starts slowly--with the mysterious deaths of conquistadores upon their raft in a whirlpool. Ursua is mysteriously wounded. The obstacles to Aguirre's leadership gradually fall away. In the end,he shows himself to be a true tyrant. His men are reduced to eating river weeds and rationing corn,while he claims that he will "marry his own daughter,and found the purest dynasty ever known."
"Aguirre,the Wrath of God" is a cinematic classic. Despite its slow pace, it is meditative and engrossing. Herzog shot it as if it were a documentary (no wonder his "Grizzly Man" is excellent) It ventures into the heart of darkness.
DVD Review: What a letdown. Summary: 1 StarsAfter reading about this "great, classic, etc" movie for years, I finally laid hands on a copy and viewed it. This is possibly the worst movie I have ever seen. It almost seemed like a joke at times. I do love the arthouse movies, film noir, classics, and other non-mainstream cinema, but I honestly do not get the hype over this waste of time. Avoid it.
DVD Review: Poetical Fanaticism Summary: 5 StarsThis was one of a handful of German films that made one think Western Civilization had a chance. I remember well seeing this for the first time back during my college days. We had all been through the New Wave and had grown a bit weary of the French "A Man and A Woman" school of romantic adventurers. This was what we've been waiting for. Serious, operatic, masculine, deep. One felt that German film was making a comeback since the glory days of the 1920s with early Fritz Lang and films like "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari." The masterpiece of mood and implied meanings can be appreciated on so many levels. It is above all an artfully made movie, with beautiful cinematography and a haunting sound track. Kinski is memorably, although one might say he has little to do or say. It is his posture and his silence that play so large here. What a dark, brooding piece. It has been some thirty years since I last saw this marvel but it is not diminished in any way.
DVD Review: Masterpiece Summary: 5 Stars Werner Herzog may just be the best film director of the last forty years. Period. And I mean worldwide. While some directors of film rely primarily on precision- think Alfred Hitchcock, intellect- think Ingmar Bergman and Stanley Kubrick, visual poesy-think Terrence Malick, or visceral reaction- think Akira Kurosawa, there is no other major filmmaker that I can think of who combines all of these things so skillfully, as well as having a mastery of music, outside of Herzog. From musical scoring to narrative pacing to visual imagery, he reigns supreme. Before watching his 1972 masterpiece, Aguirre: The Wrath Of God (Aguirre, Der Zorn Gottes), for the first time, all I had seen of Herzog were some of his documentary style films and Fitzcarraldo. This was enough to intrigue me to explore his corpus more fully, and I'm glad I did, for there's a reason this film made him a `name' on par with his contemporary German directors, Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Wim Wenders.
Aguirre: The Wrath Of God is a film that combines the best elements of such diverse great films as Alien, 2001: A Space Odyssey, and Apocalypse Now, although it is a much more visceral work than any of those films, and is topped off by one of the truly great screen performances of all time, with Klaus Kinski as the titular lead, Don Lope de Aguirre, a cripple who may also be a hunchback- whose outer deformities seem to have scarred him internally, as well. While there are numerous other supporting characters that turn in fine performances, Kinski utterly dominates the screen every second he's on it, moving like some perverse and slavering arachnid, moving in for the kill of an insect he will never bleed fully for he will never truly get it....Many critics often opt out of a real discussion of Herzog's excellence in craft by falling back on the old and misguided notion that he simplistically follows his whims and is guided by the same sort of madness he accuses Kinski of always fostering. Yet, any look at a film like this shows that Herzog transcends such myopic claims, even if unwittingly; although I seriously doubt the man who is such a scrupulous artist has ever let a foot of film be released under his name without a bit of wit applied to it. As for the screenplay? It is brilliant, knowing when to let the characters speak, and what they should say, and also relying on chance events, such as a flood which washed away Herzog's rafts. He incorporated that misfortune into the tale. Yet, what the film ultimately says means less than the whole experience, or how it is said through the art. Herzog's small budget becomes a strength when he cannot do overhead shots from a plane, or elaborate crane shots, nor delving close ups that gradually close in on someone, nor elaborate retakes....Herzog admits with justified pride that this film succeeds precisely because it does not follow the Hollywood formula: there is no real hero to root for, no predictable victory to cheer for, no visible bad guys, and no romantic interest for the leading character. Herzog amply demonstrates his superior art in the scene right after Ursua is taken away to be hung. His wife, Inez, who is repulsed by Aguirre, not attracted to him- as would be de rigueur in a Hollywood film, is shown in a shot from behind, simply gazing down at the dark and mystical river. The symbolism is simple, but immense and erotic, in its mix of death and sex, yet we never see her beautiful face, nor her svelte supple body heave. Herzog does not need to tell us that the woman is mourning her murdered husband. He thinks highly enough of his audience to assume that we get that, and also why she then later walks off into the jungle, albeit in a clean golden dress that comes out of nowhere (movie magic, Herzog proclaims in the commentary), sort of like all the stuff the refugees on Gilligan's Island somehow had. Similar scenes, featuring a captured Incan prince, reduced to slavery and interpretation with the natives, and the black slave Okello (Edward Roland- whose character was named after Zanzibarian madmen John Okello, from whose deluded speeches Herzog culled many of Aguirre's speeches), sketch real depths to these characters in only a few strokes.
Aguirre: The Wrath Of God is an indisputable masterpiece, and one of the greatest films not only of German cinema, but human cinema. That Herzog directed it when he was only twenty-eight years old is astonishing. Its combination of improvisation- for Herzog loathes storyboards, calling them the `disease of Hollywood', with an almost Bergmanian chamber drama focus on an individual, also makes it one of the most unique films ever crafted. It is a film to be seen by anyone with a love of art, intellect, and human nature, at any age, and in any age.
Description of Aguirre, the Wrath of GodIn the mid-16th century after annihilating the incan empire gonzalo pizarro leads his army of conquistadors over the andes into the heart of the most savage environment on earth in search of the fabled city of gold el dorado. As the soldiers battle starvation indians the forces of nature & each other. Studio: Starz/sphe Release Date: 06/03/2008 Starring: Helena Rojo Del Negro Run time: 94 minutes Rating: Nr Director: Werner Herzog Quite simply a great movie, one whose implacable portrait of ruthless greed and insane ambition becomes more pertinent every year. The astonishing Klaus Kinski plays Don Lope de Aguirre, a brutal conquistador who leads his soldiers into the Amazon jungle in an obsessive quest for gold. The story is of the expedition's relentless degeneration into brutality and despair, but the movie is much more than its plot. Director Werner Herzog strove, whenever possible, to replicate the historical circumstances of the conquistadors, and the sheer human effort of traveling through the dense mountains and valleys of Brazil in armor creates a palpable sense of struggle and derangement. This sense of reality, combined with Kinski's intensely furious performance, makes Aguirre, the Wrath of God a riveting film. Its unique emotional power is matched only by other Herzog-Kinski collaborations like Fitzcarraldo and Woyzek. --Bret Fetzer
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