|
New movie reviews, DVD reviews, interviews, and all things film.
Reviews A-C Reviews D-F Reviews G-J Reviews K-M Reviews N-Q Reviews R-T Reviews U-Z Redbelt **1/2 Roman de gare **1/2 Son of Rambow **1/2 Speed Racer [review coming soon] Still Life **** Iron Man *** More A Collection of 2007 Academy Award Nominated Short Films The Hottie and the Nottie I'm Not There Over Her Dead Body Paddle to the Sea The Red Balloon Silent Ozu: Three Family Comedies (Criterion Eclipse #10) Teeth Twister: Special Edition More My Top 60 Directors [Updated] Charlton Heston (1924-2008) Scott B. Smith Estelle Parsons Roger Donaldson Roy Scheider (1932-2008) Mike Binder James McAvoy Tony Gilroy David Cronenberg & Viggo Mortensen William Friedkin Peter Fonda & James Mangold Kasi Lemmons on Talk to Me Steve Buscemi on Interview Lynn Hershman-Leeson Edgar Wright, Simon Pegg & Nick Frost on Hot Fuzz Scott Frank, Joseph Gordon-Levitt & Matthew Goode The Top 50 Movies of the Past Ten Years (1997-2006) Bong Joon-ho, director of The Host Mark Polish, Michael Polish & Billy Bob Thornton My latest blog entries at cinematical.com The 'Mexican New Wave' Interview with Singaporian Filmmaker Djinn Joe Carnahan & Jeremy Piven Interview Terry Zwigoff on the new Bad Santa Director's Cut Alfonso Cuarón Interview Guillermo Del Toro Interview Chris Noonan Interview Robert Altman (1925-2006) Scarlett Johansson: A Study in Scarlett Christmas Movies Combustible Celluloid's Big Guide to Halloween & Horror Movies Joe Eszterhas Jet Li Zach Braff Kirby Dick James Ellroy Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson Adrien Brody Steve Irwin (1962-2006) Elisha Cuthbert/Jamie Babbit Matt Dillon David R. Ellis Maria Bello Brian O'Halloran and Jeff Anderson Mickey Spillane (1918-2006) Al Gore Cult Movies Actress Interview Gallery The Top 100 More Features and Interviews James Agee: The Library of America Collection, by James Agee Just Making Movies, by Ronald L. Davis Guide to Essential Movies, by Joe Leydon Cecil B. DeMille's Hollywood, by Robert S. Birchard Profoundly Disturbing, by Joe Bob Briggs A Third Face, by Samuel Fuller Dark Lover, by Emily Leider Agee on Film, by James Agee Lulu in Hollywood, by Louise Brooks Negative Space, by Manny Farber 5001 Nights at the Movies, by Pauline Kael More Books The online film magazine Combustible Celluloid offers new movie reviews, DVD reviews, film reviews, actor interviews, actress interviews, director interviews, film books and all things cinema related for the thoughtful and passionate. Online for ten years! Over 3000 reviews! Sign up for my weekly newsletter! More of Jeffrey's reviews are available at: Rotten Tomatoes and All Movie Portal. About Lists Gallery News Links E-mail me. |
Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972)Rating: 4 Stars (out of 4) Herzog's Mad JourneyBy Jeffrey M. Anderson Buy Aguirre, the Wrath of God on DVD.
Though it's slightly less impressive on video, I was still riveted and awestruck. It's a truly amazing movie, an epic made from genius, stubbornness, and madness. It's the story of Lorenzo's search for El Dorado, the lost city of gold. Aguirre (Kinski) is one of the members of the party who ends up taking over a splinter faction and leading the men to their deaths. The whole movie is shot in the jungle and on the Amazon river, and it feels as alive as if it were shot there yesterday. The film is nearly 30 years old and the story five hundred years old and somehow it still seems vivid. The film benefits from seeing My Best Fiend and knowing a few behind-the-scenes factoids. When it opens on the tremendous shot of an endless line of travelers winding down and around a mountain, and popping up just at the bottom of the frame, we know that there are normally clouds covering that mountain, and that they cleared just for that shot. Herzog says that he believes he had God on his side. What we don't tend to think about is that Herzog put himself through this ordeal as well, placing the camera in very narrow, slippery spots on this hillside. We also learn from My Best Fiend that Kinski perfected a kind of twist-pivot that brought him snakelike into the camera's view, rather than simply marching into the shot and turning sideways. This shot is used toward the end, when the men are feverish and dying on the raft. Before long, Kinski is cradling his 15-year-old daughter's head and lurching around on the raft, frightening the hundreds of monkeys who have now taken over as its primary passengers on its out-of-control voyage to nowhere. I think that one reason the film feels so alive is that Herzog never cheats. He never shoots an overhead perspective shot from the comfort of a helicopter. When Aguirre and his band are on their raft, Herzog is on the raft, too. We don't see it from a distance (until the very last shot). As the raft tumbles down the rapids, the camera has water spots on it. We know that they couldn't go back and get the shot again, or cut to a safe master shot. So the water spots made it to the final cut. Roger Ebert, who considers this film one of the best ever made, calls it "foolhardy", and compares it to other mad masterworks like Erich von Stroheim's Greed (1924) and Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now (1979). Pauline Kael wrote about the "film folly" and lists Bernardo Bertolucci's 1900 (1976) and D.W. Griffith's Intolerance (1916). These are madmen whose visions are so monumental that whole crews must suffer intolerable conditions for unendurable lengths of time so that great foolhardy films may be made. I was thinking, now that Herzog and Coppola have both been tamed, who is left to make these mad films? Titanic wanted to be such a film, but it was too controlled and its script was too childish. No, it could be that Aguirre is one of the last of these kinds of films. Herzog tried to duplicate it with Fitzcarraldo (1982), which is only a fraction as interesting or poetic as Aguirre. Aguirre, the Wrath of God remains a treasure. It's a glimpse into a visionary's mind. It's a passionate love/hate poem to the jungle and to Klaus Kinski. It's an incredible statement about the nature of man. And it's as potent today as the day it opened. Hopefully one day it will be available on DVD with Herzog commentary, but for now, the VHS tape, by New Yorker was enough to make me a believer. DVD Details: Anchor Bay's DVD is presented, for some reason, in the full-frame aspect ratio (1.33-to-1), and comes with a commentary track by Herzog and Norman Hill, plus a trailer, bios and an optional English language track. The disc is available by itself, or in the great Herzog/Kinski box set, which also comes with Nosferatu, Woyzeck, Fitzcarraldo, Cobra Verde and My Best Fiend. Starring: Klaus Kinski, Helena Rojo, Cecilia Rivera, Del Negro, Ruy Guerra, Peter Berling |
| Home |
News |
Search Reviews |
Classic Movies |
DVDs |
Features |
Film Books |
Gallery |
Links |
About |
The Rating System |
Email Me |