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Aguirre, the Wrath of God

Aguirre, the Wrath of God (Spanish: [aˈɣire]; German: Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes; [aˈɡɪʁə deːɐ̯ ˌtsɔʁn ˈɡɔtəs]) is a 1972[2] epic historical drama film produced, written and directed by Werner Herzog. Klaus Kinski stars in the title role of Spanish soldier Lope de Aguirre, who leads a group of conquistadores down the Amazon River in South America in search of the legendary city of gold, El Dorado. The accompanying soundtrack was composed and performed by kosmische band Popol Vuh. The film is an international co-production between West Germany and Mexico.

Aguirre, the Wrath of God
German theatrical release poster
GermanAguirre, der Zorn Gottes
Directed byWerner Herzog
Written byWerner Herzog
Produced byWerner Herzog
Walter Saxer
Starring
CinematographyThomas Mauch
Edited byBeate Mainka-Jellinghaus
Music byPopol Vuh
Production
companies
Distributed byFilmverlag der Autoren[1]
Release date
  • 29 December 1972 (1972-12-29)
Running time
94 minutes
Countries
LanguageGerman[5]
BudgetUS$370,000[6]

Using a minimalist approach to story and dialogue, the film creates a vision of madness and folly, counterpointed by the lush but unforgiving Amazonian jungle. Although loosely based on what is known of the historical figure of Aguirre, Herzog acknowledged years after the film's release that its storyline is a work of fiction. Some of the people and situations may have been inspired by Gaspar de Carvajal's account of an earlier Amazonian expedition, although Carvajal was not on the historical voyage represented in the film.

Aguirre was the first of five collaborations between Herzog and Kinski. They had differing views as to how the role should be played, and they clashed throughout filming; Kinski's rages terrorized both the crew and the locals who were assisting the production. Shooting was entirely on location, and was fraught with difficulties. Filming took place in the Peruvian rainforest on the Amazon River during an arduous five-week period, shooting on tributaries of the Ucayali region. The cast and crew climbed mountains, cut through heavy vines to open routes to the various jungle locations, and rode treacherous river rapids on rafts built by local craftworkers.

Aguirre opened to widespread critical acclaim, and quickly developed a large international cult film following. It was given an extensive arthouse theatrical release in the United States in 1977, and remains one of the director's best-known films. Several critics have declared the film a masterpiece, and it has appeared on Time magazine's list of "All Time 100 Best Films".

Plot edit

On Christmas Day, 1560, several scores of Spanish conquistadors, and a hundred native slaves, march down from the newly conquered Inca Empire in the Andes mountains into the jungles to the east, in search of the fabled country of El Dorado. Under the command of Gonzalo Pizarro, the men, clad in half armor, pull cannons down narrow mountain paths and through dense, muddy jungle.

On New Year's Eve Pizarro orders a group of forty men to build rafts and scout down the river. If they do not return to the main party within one week with news of what lies beyond, they will be considered lost. Pizarro chooses Don Pedro de Ursúa as the commander of the expedition, Don Lope de Aguirre as his second-in-command, fat nobleman Don Fernando de Guzmán to represent the Royal House of Spain, and Brother Gaspar de Carvajal to bring the word of God. Accompanying the expedition, against Pizarro's better judgment, are Ursúa's mistress, Doña Inés, and Aguirre's teenage daughter, Flores.

Traveling through rapids, one of the four rafts gets caught in an eddy, and the others are unable to help free it. That night, gunfire erupts on the trapped raft; in the morning the men on board are found dead, with three missing. Ursúa wants the bodies brought back to camp for burial. Knowing this would slow down the expedition, Aguirre suggests that Perucho fire the cannon to clean the rust from it. He fires at the raft, destroying it and throwing the bodies into the river.

During the night, the remaining rafts are swept away by the rising river. Time has run out for the scouting mission, and Ursúa decides to return to Pizarro's group despite the danger from hostile Indians. Aguirre leads a mutiny against Ursúa, telling the men that untold riches await them ahead, and reminding them that Hernán Cortés won an empire in Mexico by disobeying orders. Ursúa orders Aguirre arrested, but he and a soldier loyal to him are shot. Aguirre nominates Guzmán as the new leader of the expedition and rebels against the Spanish Crown, proclaiming Guzmán the emperor of El Dorado. A farcical trial of Ursúa results in his being sentenced to death, but Guzmán surprises Aguirre by granting Ursúa clemency.

Aguirre remains the true leader of the mutiny, so oppressive and terrifying that few protest his leadership. Only Inés has the courage to speak out against him. Knowing that some of the soldiers are still loyal to Ursúa, Aguirre ignores her.

The expedition continues on a single, newly built, large raft. An indigenous couple approaching peacefully by canoe are captured by the explorers, and when the man expresses confusion when presented with a Bible, Brother Carvajal kills them for blasphemy. Guzmán dines on the low food supplies while the men starve, and has the expedition's only remaining horse pushed off the raft because it annoys him. Soon afterwards he is found dead near the raft's privy. After Guzmán's death, Aguirre proclaims himself leader. Ursúa is then taken ashore and hanged in the jungle. The group attacks an indigenous village, where several soldiers are killed by spears and arrows. The distraught Inés walks into the jungle and disappears.

On the raft again, the group of slowly starving, feverish men begin disbelieving everything they see, even when shot at with arrows. The group stares in disbelief at a wooden ship perched in the highest branches of a tall tree. Aguirre orders that it be brought down and refurbished, but Brother Carvajal refuses. In a series of final attacks by unseen assailants, the remaining survivors including Aguirre's daughter are killed by arrows. Monkeys overrun the raft as Aguirre imagines conquering all of America and founding an incestuous dynasty with his deceased daughter to rule over it. He then picks up a monkey, asking "Who else is with me?"

Cast edit

Production edit

The idea for the film began when Herzog borrowed a book on historical adventurers from a friend. After reading a half-page devoted to Lope de Aguirre, the filmmaker became inspired and immediately devised the story. He fabricated most of the plot details and characters, although he did use some historical figures in purely fictitious ways.[7]

Screenplay edit

Herzog wrote the screenplay "in a frenzy", and completed it in two-and-a-half days. Much of the script was written during a 200-mile (320 km) bus trip with Herzog's football team. His teammates got drunk after winning a game and one vomited on several pages of Herzog's manuscript, which he immediately threw out the window. Herzog claims he cannot remember all of what he wrote on these pages.[7]

The screenplay was mostly shot as written, with only minor differences. In an early scene in which Pizarro instructs Ursúa to lead the scouting team down the river, in the script, Pizarro mentions that in the course of the expedition Ursúa could possibly discover what happened to Francisco de Orellana's expedition, which had vanished without a trace years before (see "Historical Accuracy" section). Later in the screenplay, Aguirre and his men find a boat and the long-dead remains of Orellana's soldiers.[8]

Further down the river, they discover another ship lodged in some tree tops. In the screenplay, Aguirre and others explore the boat but find no sign of Orellana or his men. Herzog ultimately eliminated any such references to Orellana's expedition from the film. The sequence with the boat caught in the upper branches of a tree remains, but as filmed it seems to be simply a hallucinatory vision.[8]

The finale is significantly different from Herzog's original script. The director recalled, "I only remember that the end of the film was totally different. The end was actually the raft going out into the open ocean and being swept back inland, because for many miles you have a counter-current, the Amazon actually goes backwards. And it was tossed to and fro. And a parrot would scream: 'El Dorado, El Dorado'".[9] This ending was eventually used for Cobra Verde.

Herzog and Kinski edit

Herzog's first choice for the role of Aguirre was actor Klaus Kinski. The two had met many years earlier when the then-struggling young actor rented a room in Herzog's family apartment, and Kinski's often terrifying and deranged antics during the three months he lived there left a lasting impression on the director. Years later, Herzog remembered the volatile actor and knew that he was the only possible man who could play the mad Aguirre, and he sent Kinski a copy of the screenplay. "Between three and four in the morning, the phone rang", Herzog recalled. "It took me at least a couple of minutes before I realized that it was Kinski who was the source of this inarticulate screaming. And after an hour of this, it dawned on me that he found it the most fascinating screenplay and wanted to be Aguirre."[10]

From the beginning of the production, Herzog and Kinski argued about the proper manner to portray Aguirre. Kinski wanted to play a "wild, ranting madman", but Herzog wanted something "quieter, more menacing". In order to get the performance he desired, before each shot Herzog would deliberately infuriate Kinski. After waiting for the hot-tempered actor's anger to "burn itself out", Herzog would then roll the camera.[11]

On one occasion, irritated by the noise from a hut where cast and crew were playing cards, the explosive Kinski fired three gunshots at it, blowing the tip off one extra's finger.[7] Subsequently, Kinski decided to leave the jungle location (over Herzog's refusal to fire a sound assistant), only changing his mind after Herzog threatened to shoot first Kinski and then himself. The latter incident has given rise to the legend that Herzog made Kinski act for him at gunpoint. However, Herzog has repeatedly denied the claim during interviews, saying he only verbally threatened Kinski in the heat of the moment, in a desperate attempt to keep him from leaving the set.[12] The incident is parodied in Incident at Loch Ness, which Herzog co-wrote.[13]

Filming edit

The film was made for US$370,000, with one-third of the budget paying for Kinski's salary.[14] It was filmed on location in the Peruvian rainforest, Machu Picchu (the stone steps of Huayna Picchu),[14] and on the Amazon River tributaries of the Ucayali region. Aguirre was shot in five weeks, following nine months of pre-production planning.[7] The film was shot in chronological order, because Herzog believed the film crew's progress on the river directly mirrored that of the explorers' journey in the story. The director and his cast and crew floated in rafts down the Huallaga and Nanay rivers through the Urubamba Valley in Peru.[14]

All of the actors spoke their dialogue in English. The members of the cast and crew came from sixteen countries, and English was the only common language among them. In addition, Herzog felt that shooting Aguirre in English would improve the film's chances for international distribution. However, the small amount of money that had been set aside for post-synchronization "left Peru with the man in charge of the process; both absconded en route". The English-language track was ultimately replaced by a higher-quality German language version, which was post-synched after production was completed.[5] Herzog claims that Kinski requested too much money for the dubbing session, and so his lines were performed by another actor.[15]

The low budget precluded the use of stunt men or elaborate special effects. Cinematography in many scenes was done in order to accommodate the inclement weather and terrain of the region, with the camera lens often being obscured by rainwater and mud when the cast moved through thicker regions of the jungle. The cast and crew climbed up mountains, experienced the adverse conditions of the jungle, and rode Amazonian river rapids on rafts built by locals. At one point, a storm caused a river to flood, covering the film sets in several feet of water and destroying all the rafts built for the film. This flooding was immediately incorporated into the story, as a sequence including a flood and subsequent rebuilding of rafts was shot.[7]

The camera used to shoot the film was stolen by Herzog from the Munich Film School.[16] Years later, Herzog recalled:

It was a very simple 35mm camera, one I used on many other films, so I do not consider it a theft. For me, it was truly a necessity. I wanted to make films and needed a camera. I had some sort of natural right to this tool. If you need air to breathe, and you are locked in a room, you have to take a chisel and hammer and break down a wall. It is your absolute right.[14]

To obtain the monkeys used in the climactic sequence, Herzog paid several locals to trap 400 monkeys. He paid them half in advance and was to pay the other half upon receipt. The trappers sold the monkeys to someone in Los Angeles or Miami, and Herzog came to the airport just as the monkeys were being loaded to be shipped out of the country. He pretended to be a veterinarian and claimed that the monkeys needed vaccinations before leaving the country. Abashed, the handlers handed the monkeys over to Herzog, who used them in the shot they were required for, then released them afterwards into the jungle.[7]

Music edit

Aguirre's musical score was performed by Popol Vuh, a West German progressive/Krautrock band. The band was formed in 1969 by keyboardist Florian Fricke, who had known Herzog for several years prior to the formation of the band.[17] He had appeared as an actor in the director's first full-length film, Signs of Life (1968), playing a pianist. Aguirre was only the first of many collaborations between the band and the director.

Popol Vuh's "hypnotic music"[18] for Aguirre met with considerable acclaim. Roger Ebert wrote, "The music sets the tone. It is haunting, ecclesiastical, human and yet something else ... [T]he music is crucial to Aguirre, the Wrath of God".[19] AllMusic noted, "The film's central motif blends pulsing Moog and spectral voices conjured from Florian Fricke's Mellotron-related 'choir organ' to achieve something sublime, in the truest sense of the word: it's hard not to find the music's awe-inspiring, overwhelming beauty simultaneously unsettling. The power of the legendary opening sequence of Herzog's film ... owes as much to Popol Vuh's music as it does to the director's mise-en-scène."[20]

Herzog explained how the choir-like sound was created: "We used a strange instrument, which we called a 'choir-organ.' It has inside it three dozen different tapes running parallel to each other in loops. ... All these tapes are running at the same time, and there is a keyboard on which you can play them like an organ so that [it will] sound just like a human choir but yet, at the same time, very artificial and really quite eerie."[19]

In 1975 Popol Vuh released an album entitled Aguirre. Although ostensibly a soundtrack album to Herzog's film, the six-track LP included only two songs ("Aguirre I (L'Acrime Di Rei)" and "Aguirre II") taken from Aguirre, the Wrath of God. The four remaining tracks were derived from various recordings made by the group between about 1972 and 1974. At the time of Aguirre the band members were Fricke (piano, Mellotron), Fichelscher (electric guitar, acoustic guitar, drums), Djong Yun (vocals), and Robert Eliscu (oboe, pan pipe).

Wings of Hope edit

While Herzog was location scouting for Aguirre, the Wrath of God in Peru, his reservation on LANSA Flight 508 had been canceled due to a last minute change in itinerary. During this flight, the airplane disintegrated in mid-air after a lightning strike and crashed in the Peruvian Amazon rainforest in 1971, killing 91 people, except the sole survivor, 17-year-old Juliane Koepcke. Herzog was inspired to make the 1998 documentary film Wings of Hope about Koepcke's survival of the aviation disaster and in the jungle, since he had narrowly avoided taking the same flight.[21]

Reception edit

Critical response edit

The film was produced in part by West German television station Hessischer Rundfunk, which televised the film on the same day it opened in theatres. Herzog has blamed this for the relatively poor commercial reception of the film in Germany.[14] However, outside Germany the film became an "enormous cult favorite" in "such places as Mexico, Venezuela, and Algiers".[22] The film had a theatrical run of fifteen months in Paris.[23] Aguirre received a theatrical release in the United States in 1977 by New Yorker Films. It immediately became a cult film, and New Yorker Films reported four years after its initial release that it was the only film in its catalog that never went out of circulation.[22]

In Germany, the Süddeutsche Zeitung described the film as "a colour-drenched, violently physical moving painting".[24] The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung described Kinski's acting as "too theatrical" to embody God's wrath.[24]

In the US and the UK the film received mostly positive critical notices upon release. Vincent Canby, writing in The New York Times, called it "[A]bsolutely stunning ... Mr. Herzog views all the proceedings with fixed detachment. He remains cool. He takes no sides. He may even be slightly amused. Mainly he is a poet who constantly surprises us with unexpected juxtapositions ... This is a splendid and haunting work."[25]

In Time, Richard Schickel opined that "[Herzog] does the audience the honor of allowing it to discover the blindnesses and obsessions, the sober lunacies he quietly lays out on the screen. Well acted, most notably by Klaus Kinski in the title role, gloriously photographed by Thomas Mauch, Aguirre is, not to put too fine a point on it, a movie that makes a convincing claim to greatness."[26] Time Out's Tony Rayns noted, "each scene and each detail is honed down to its salient features. On this level, the film effectively pre-empts analysis by analysing itself as it proceeds, admitting no ambiguity. Yet at the same time, Herzog's flair for charged explosive imagery has never had freer rein, and the film is rich in oneiric moments."[27]

Legacy edit

The film's reputation through the years has continued to grow. On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 96% of 50 critics gave the film a positive review, with an average rating of 9/10. The site's critics consensus reads, "A haunting journey of natural wonder and tangible danger, Aguirre transcends epic genre trappings and becomes mythological by its own right."[28]

J. Hoberman has written that Aguirre "is not just a great movie but an essential one ... Herzog's third feature ... is both a landmark film and a magnificent social metaphor".[29] Danny Peary wrote, "To see Aguirre for the first time is to discover a genuine masterpiece. It is overwhelming, spellbinding; at first dreamlike, and then hallucinatory."[22] Roger Ebert has added it to his list of The Great Movies,[19] and in a 2002 Sight & Sound poll of critics and filmmakers on the best films ever made, Ebert listed it in his top ten.[30] In the same poll, critic Nigel Andrews and director Santosh Sivan also placed it in their top ten list.[31] Martin Scorsese included it on a list of "39 Essential Foreign Films for a Young Filmmaker".[32]

In 1999, Rolling Stone included the film on the magazine's "100 Maverick Movies of the Last 100 Years" list.[33] Aguirre was included in Time magazine's "All Time 100 Best Films", compiled by Richard Schickel and Richard Corliss.[34] Entertainment Weekly named it the 46th greatest cult film ever made.[35] The film was ranked #19 in Empire magazine's "The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema" in 2010.[36]

Aguirre has won several prestigious film awards. In 1973 it won the Deutscher Filmpreis (German Film Award) for "Outstanding Individual Achievement: Cinematography".[37] In 1976 it was voted the "Best Foreign Film" by the French Syndicate of Film Critics.[38][39] In 1977 the National Society of Film Critics US gave it their "Best Cinematography" Award.[40] It won the prestigious Grand Prix of the Belgian Film Critics Association in 1976 and was nominated for a "Best Film" César Award.[41]

Influence edit

Francis Ford Coppola's 1979 film Apocalypse Now, a film based on Joseph Conrad's 1902 novella Heart of Darkness, was influenced also by Aguirre, as it contains seemingly deliberate visual "quotations" of Herzog's film.[42][43][44] Coppola himself has noted, "Aguirre, with its incredible imagery, was a very strong influence. I'd be remiss if I didn't mention it."[45]

Several critics have noted that Aguirre appears to have had a direct influence on several other films. Martin Rubin has written that "[a]mong the films strongly influenced by Aguirre are Coppola's Apocalypse Now and Terrence Malick's The New World (2005)".[42] J. Hoberman agreed, noting that Herzog's "sui generis Amazon fever dream" was "the influence Malick's over-inflated New World can't shake."[29] Channel 4 opined "This is an astonishing, deceptively simple, pocket-sized epic whose influence, in terms of both style and narrative, is seen in films as diverse as Apocalypse Now, The Mission, Predator, and The Blair Witch Project (1999)."[46]

Historical accuracy edit

Although plot details and many of the characters in Aguirre come directly from Herzog's own imagination, historians have pointed out that the film fairly accurately incorporates some 16th-century events and historical personages into a fictional narrative.

Herzog's screenplay merged two expeditions: one led by Gonzalo Pizarro in 1541, which resulted in the discovery by Europeans of the Amazon River by Francisco de Orellana, and another one that occurred in 1560. The expedition of Gonzalo Pizarro and his men left from the city of Quito and entered the Amazon basin in search of El Dorado. Various troubles afflicted the expedition and, sure that El Dorado was very close, Pizarro set up a smaller group led by Francisco de Orellana, to break off from the main group and forge ahead, then return with news of what they had found.

This group utilized a brigantine to journey down the river. After failing to find the legendary city, Orellana was unable to return because of the current, and he and his men continued to follow the Napo River until he reached the estuary of the Amazon in 1542. Accompanying Orellana was Gaspar de Carvajal, who kept a journal of the group's experiences.

The historic Gaspar de Carvajal (1500–1584) was a Spanish Dominican friar who had settled in Peru and dedicated himself to the conversion of the Indigenous peoples. His general attitude towards the local people was consistent with the benevolence of his better-known brother Dominican friar, Bartolomé de las Casas.[citation needed] This personality is at odds with the description in the film where Carvajal is portrayed as a cowardly priest who claimed that "the church was always on the side of the strong".[8]

The film's major characters, Aguirre, Ursúa, Don Fernando, Inez and Flores, were involved in the second expedition, which left Peru in 1560 to find the city of El Dorado. Commissioned by Peru's governor, Ursúa organized an expeditionary group of 300 men to travel by way of the Amazon River. He was accompanied by his mixed-race mistress, Doña Inez. At one point during the journey, Aguirre, a professional soldier, decided that he could use the 300 men to overthrow the Spanish rule of Peru. Aguirre had Ursúa murdered and proclaimed Fernando as "The Prince of Peru".[47]

Fernando himself was eventually murdered when he questioned Aguirre's scheme of sailing to the Atlantic, conquering Panama, crossing the isthmus and invading Peru. Many others who attempted to rebel against Aguirre were also killed. The surviving soldiers conquered Isla Margarita off the coast of Venezuela and made preparations to attack the mainland.[47]

By that time, Spanish authorities had learned of Aguirre's plans. When the rebels arrived in Venezuela, government agents offered full pardons to Aguirre's men. All of them accepted the deal. Immediately prior to his arrest, Aguirre murdered his daughter Flores, who had remained by his side during the entire journey. He was then captured and dismembered.[47]

Other Spanish expeditions outside the Amazon influenced the story. The conversation in which the local inhabitants refuse a Bible comes from events before the Battle of Cajamarca, in which Inca emperor Atahualpa allegedly rejected the Requerimiento. The chronicle of Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca, La Relación ("The Account"), mentions the appearance of a boat in a treetop after a fierce tropical storm in Hispaniola:

Monday morning we went down to the port and did not find the ships. We saw their buoys in the water, from which we realized that they had been lost, and we went along the coast to see if we could find signs of them. Since we found nothing, we went into the woods, and a quarter of a league into them we found one of the ship's boats in some trees.

— Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca.[48]

Kinski's crazed performance bore similarities to the real Aguirre, a "true homicidal megalomaniac". Many of his fellow soldiers considered his actions to be that of a madman.[8] Kinski's use of a limp reflected a limp that Aguirre had, the result of a battle injury. Aguirre's frequent short but impassioned speeches to his men in the film were accurately based on the man's noted "simple but effective rhetorical ability".[47] The South Atlantic Review observes the film's attitude toward historical accuracy as being similar to works of Shakespeare:

Like Shakespeare, Herzog begins with chronicle accounts of events and personages, but then re-shapes and embroiders upon these historical chronicles, at once providing answers and revealing more puzzling questions, not only turning "history" into "art" (a tenuous distinction in any case), but meditating upon the makers and the making of history. — Gregory A. Waller[47]

Additionally noted is the juxtaposition of Spanish imperialism with that of Nazism, specifically citing Aguirre's deranged closing speech as "historical analogy with Hitler and German fascism". Film Quarterly further expands on this point, marking the casting of Kinski as emblematic of this historical parallel:

[Herzog] achieves this dimension by choosing an actor with typically Nordic coloring: Klaus Kinski, with his blond hair and blue eyes. According to historical accounts, Aguirre was "of short stature . . . sparely made, ill-featured, the face small and lean, [the] beard black. " Herzog's Aguirre is not of "short stature" but although he is not very tall, his deformity causes him to stand out. Unlike the historical Aguirre, this one has unusually large features and is beardless and blond. Through this blond Nordic knight, Herzog alludes to a much earlier age of expansionism: to medieval Germany with the religious imperialism of the Crusaders and the Teutonic Knights, and also to a more recent period: the 1930s, which combined the rebirth of the Nordic stereotype (seen in the light of racial superiority) with Hitler's attempts at imperialist conquest. Herzog's main character is more than a conquistador of one particular century; he is the embodiment of imperialism as such. Seen in this light, Herzog's re-creation of a specific period in history, i.e., Spain's conquests in the New World, becomes a treatise on the evils of imperialism through the ages. It is not surprising then, that Herzog's film constitutes a great flight of fancy mostly leaving historical data behind and making instead a collage of fact and fiction.[49]

While film journalists acknowledge the various liberties taken within the film's depiction of historical events, these choices are observed as creative decisions on the part of the director, both in service of the narrative structure and also as reflections of imperialist and fascist manifestations occurring throughout history, both prior to and following the 16th-century conquest of South America. Kinski's manic performance combined with the film's blunt portrayal of violence toward the native population acts less as a literal portrayal of events and more as broad condemnation of both historical events and the concept of imperialist conquest.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes". Filmverlag der Autoren. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  2. ^ a b . British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 11 February 2016.
  3. ^ "Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes". Lumiere. Retrieved 17 March 2019.
  4. ^ "Aguirre, La Ira de Dios (Aguirre, Der Zorn Gottes) — ruidoblanco". Ruido Blanco FM (in Mexican Spanish). 3 October 2022. Retrieved 29 March 2023.
  5. ^ a b Overbey, David. Movies of the Seventies, pg. 162. Edited by Ann Lloyd, Orbis Books, 1984. ISBN 0-85613-640-9: The film was shot MOS in English, but was primarily released in a German-dubbed version.
  6. ^ "Business Data for Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 19 March 2007.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Herzog, Werner. Aguirre, the Wrath of God DVD, Anchor Bay Entertainment, 2001, audio commentary. OCLC 228418112
  8. ^ a b c d Fritze, Ronald (1985). "Werner Herzog's Adaptation of History in Aguirre, The Wrath of God". Film & History: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Film and Television Studies. 15 (4): 74–86. doi:10.1353/flm.1985.a402266. S2CID 191781266. Project MUSE 402266 ProQuest 1308280267.
  9. ^ Herzog, Werner. "The Trail of Werner Herzog: An Interview". Off Screen. Retrieved 8 May 2007.
  10. ^ O'Mahony, John (20 March 2002). "The Enigma of Werner H". The Guardian. London.
  11. ^ Knipfel, Jim. Aguirre, the Wrath of God DVD, Anchor Bay Entertainment, 2001, liner notes.
  12. ^ Dickson, Mary (27 April 1998). "Hauntingly Herzog". City Weekly. Salt Lake City.
  13. ^ Scheib, Richard (21 March 2009). . Moria, The Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review. Archived from the original on 12 March 2012. Retrieved 7 September 2009.
  14. ^ a b c d e Herzog, Werner. Herzog on Herzog, edited by Paul Cronin, Faber & Faber, 2003. ISBN 0-571-20708-1
  15. ^ Ebert, Roger. . rogerebert.com. Archived from the original on 10 September 2005. Retrieved 19 June 2007.
  16. ^ Bissell, Tom (December 2006). "The Secret Mainstream: Contemplating the mirages of Werner Herzog". Harper's Magazine.
  17. ^ Augustin, Gerhard. "Florian Fricke Interview". Eurock. from the original on 15 October 2007. Retrieved 30 October 2007.
  18. ^ Schager, Nick. . Slant Magazine. Archived from the original on 13 December 2007. Retrieved 30 October 2007.
  19. ^ a b c Ebert, Roger (4 April 1999). "Aguirre, the Wrath of God". RogerEbert.com. Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 24 February 2024.
  20. ^ Wilson, Neate. "Aguirre Review". Allmusic. Retrieved 30 October 2007.
  21. ^ Herzog, Werner (2001). Herzog on Herzog. Faber and Faber. ISBN 0-571-20708-1.
  22. ^ a b c Peary, Danny. Cult Movies, Delta Books, 1981. ISBN 0-517-20185-2
  23. ^ Young, Vernon (1977). "Much Madness: Werner Herzog and Contemporary German Cinema". The Hudson Review. 30 (3): 409–414. doi:10.2307/3850276. JSTOR 3850276.
  24. ^ a b Baumgardt, Carsten. "Aguirre – Der Zorn Gottes (German language)". FilmStarts. from the original on 28 February 2009. Retrieved 24 March 2009.
  25. ^ Canby, Vincent (4 April 1977). "'Aguirre, the Wrath of God' Haunting Film by Herzog". The New York Times.
  26. ^ Schickel, Richard (16 May 1977). . Time. New York. Archived from the original on 8 January 2007.
  27. ^ Rayns, Tony. "Aguirre, Wrath of God". Time Out Film guide. Retrieved 14 March 2007.
  28. ^ "Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 9 August 2021.
  29. ^ a b Hoberman, J. (10 October 2006). . Village Voice. New York. Archived from the original on 6 March 2007.
  30. ^ Ebert, Roger. . Sight&Sound/BFI. Archived from the original on 10 March 2007. Retrieved 2007-03-14.
  31. ^ Sivan, Santosh. . Sight&Sound/BFI. Archived from the original on 15 December 2007. Retrieved 21 November 2007.
  32. ^ "Martin Scorsese Creates a List of 39 Essential Foreign Films for a Young Filmmaker". Open Culture. 15 October 2014. from the original on 7 February 2015. Retrieved 1 February 2015.
  33. ^ "Rolling Stone 100 Maverick Movies of the Last 100 Years". Filmsite.com. Retrieved 28 December 2007.
  34. ^ Corliss, Richard; Schickel, Richard (12 February 2005). "All-Time 100 Best Films". Time. ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
  35. ^ "The Top Cult Movies" 26 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine, Entertainment Weekly.
  36. ^ "The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema – Aguirre, the Wrath of God". Empire. Retrieved 18 April 2013.
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  47. ^ a b c d e Waller, Gregory A. (1981). "'Aguirre, The Wrath of God': History, Theater, and the Camera". South Atlantic Review. 46 (2): 55–69. doi:10.2307/3199461. JSTOR 3199461.
  48. ^ Alvar Nuñez Cabeza de Vaca 'The Account and Commentaries of Governor Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca, Chapter One
  49. ^ Stiles, Victoria M. (1989). "Fact and Fiction: Nature's Endgame in Werner Herzog's Aguirre, the Wrath of God". Literature/Film Quarterly. 17 (3). Salisbury: 161–167. ProQuest 226990358.

External links edit

aguirre, wrath, other, uses, aguirre, disambiguation, spanish, aˈɣire, german, aguirre, zorn, gottes, aˈɡɪʁə, deːɐ, ˌtsɔʁn, ˈɡɔtəs, 1972, epic, historical, drama, film, produced, written, directed, werner, herzog, klaus, kinski, stars, title, role, spanish, so. For other uses see Aguirre disambiguation Aguirre the Wrath of God Spanish aˈɣire German Aguirre der Zorn Gottes aˈɡɪʁe deːɐ ˌtsɔʁn ˈɡɔtes is a 1972 2 epic historical drama film produced written and directed by Werner Herzog Klaus Kinski stars in the title role of Spanish soldier Lope de Aguirre who leads a group of conquistadores down the Amazon River in South America in search of the legendary city of gold El Dorado The accompanying soundtrack was composed and performed by kosmische band Popol Vuh The film is an international co production between West Germany and Mexico Aguirre the Wrath of GodGerman theatrical release posterGermanAguirre der Zorn GottesDirected byWerner HerzogWritten byWerner HerzogProduced byWerner HerzogWalter SaxerStarringKlaus Kinski Helena Rojo Del Negro Ruy Guerra Peter Berling Cecilia Rivera Dany Ades Armando PolanahCinematographyThomas MauchEdited byBeate Mainka JellinghausMusic byPopol VuhProductioncompaniesWerner Herzog Filmproduktion Hessischer RundfunkDistributed byFilmverlag der Autoren 1 Release date29 December 1972 1972 12 29 Running time94 minutesCountriesWest Germany 2 3 Mexico Peru 4 LanguageGerman 5 BudgetUS 370 000 6 Using a minimalist approach to story and dialogue the film creates a vision of madness and folly counterpointed by the lush but unforgiving Amazonian jungle Although loosely based on what is known of the historical figure of Aguirre Herzog acknowledged years after the film s release that its storyline is a work of fiction Some of the people and situations may have been inspired by Gaspar de Carvajal s account of an earlier Amazonian expedition although Carvajal was not on the historical voyage represented in the film Aguirre was the first of five collaborations between Herzog and Kinski They had differing views as to how the role should be played and they clashed throughout filming Kinski s rages terrorized both the crew and the locals who were assisting the production Shooting was entirely on location and was fraught with difficulties Filming took place in the Peruvian rainforest on the Amazon River during an arduous five week period shooting on tributaries of the Ucayali region The cast and crew climbed mountains cut through heavy vines to open routes to the various jungle locations and rode treacherous river rapids on rafts built by local craftworkers Aguirre opened to widespread critical acclaim and quickly developed a large international cult film following It was given an extensive arthouse theatrical release in the United States in 1977 and remains one of the director s best known films Several critics have declared the film a masterpiece and it has appeared on Time magazine s list of All Time 100 Best Films Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Screenplay 3 2 Herzog and Kinski 3 3 Filming 3 4 Music 3 5 Wings of Hope 4 Reception 4 1 Critical response 4 2 Legacy 4 3 Influence 5 Historical accuracy 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksPlot editOn Christmas Day 1560 several scores of Spanish conquistadors and a hundred native slaves march down from the newly conquered Inca Empire in the Andes mountains into the jungles to the east in search of the fabled country of El Dorado Under the command of Gonzalo Pizarro the men clad in half armor pull cannons down narrow mountain paths and through dense muddy jungle On New Year s Eve Pizarro orders a group of forty men to build rafts and scout down the river If they do not return to the main party within one week with news of what lies beyond they will be considered lost Pizarro chooses Don Pedro de Ursua as the commander of the expedition Don Lope de Aguirre as his second in command fat nobleman Don Fernando de Guzman to represent the Royal House of Spain and Brother Gaspar de Carvajal to bring the word of God Accompanying the expedition against Pizarro s better judgment are Ursua s mistress Dona Ines and Aguirre s teenage daughter Flores Traveling through rapids one of the four rafts gets caught in an eddy and the others are unable to help free it That night gunfire erupts on the trapped raft in the morning the men on board are found dead with three missing Ursua wants the bodies brought back to camp for burial Knowing this would slow down the expedition Aguirre suggests that Perucho fire the cannon to clean the rust from it He fires at the raft destroying it and throwing the bodies into the river During the night the remaining rafts are swept away by the rising river Time has run out for the scouting mission and Ursua decides to return to Pizarro s group despite the danger from hostile Indians Aguirre leads a mutiny against Ursua telling the men that untold riches await them ahead and reminding them that Hernan Cortes won an empire in Mexico by disobeying orders Ursua orders Aguirre arrested but he and a soldier loyal to him are shot Aguirre nominates Guzman as the new leader of the expedition and rebels against the Spanish Crown proclaiming Guzman the emperor of El Dorado A farcical trial of Ursua results in his being sentenced to death but Guzman surprises Aguirre by granting Ursua clemency Aguirre remains the true leader of the mutiny so oppressive and terrifying that few protest his leadership Only Ines has the courage to speak out against him Knowing that some of the soldiers are still loyal to Ursua Aguirre ignores her The expedition continues on a single newly built large raft An indigenous couple approaching peacefully by canoe are captured by the explorers and when the man expresses confusion when presented with a Bible Brother Carvajal kills them for blasphemy Guzman dines on the low food supplies while the men starve and has the expedition s only remaining horse pushed off the raft because it annoys him Soon afterwards he is found dead near the raft s privy After Guzman s death Aguirre proclaims himself leader Ursua is then taken ashore and hanged in the jungle The group attacks an indigenous village where several soldiers are killed by spears and arrows The distraught Ines walks into the jungle and disappears On the raft again the group of slowly starving feverish men begin disbelieving everything they see even when shot at with arrows The group stares in disbelief at a wooden ship perched in the highest branches of a tall tree Aguirre orders that it be brought down and refurbished but Brother Carvajal refuses In a series of final attacks by unseen assailants the remaining survivors including Aguirre s daughter are killed by arrows Monkeys overrun the raft as Aguirre imagines conquering all of America and founding an incestuous dynasty with his deceased daughter to rule over it He then picks up a monkey asking Who else is with me Cast editKlaus Kinski as Lope de Aguirre Helena Rojo as Ines de Atienza Ruy Guerra as Don Pedro de Ursua Del Negro as Brother Gaspar de Carvajal Peter Berling as Don Fernando de Guzman Cecilia Rivera as Flores de Aguirre Daniel Ades as Perucho Edward Roland as Okello Armando Polanah as Armando Alejandro Repulles as Gonzalo Pizarro Justo Gonzalez as Gonzalez Alexandra Cheves Daniel Farfan Julio E MartinezProduction editThe idea for the film began when Herzog borrowed a book on historical adventurers from a friend After reading a half page devoted to Lope de Aguirre the filmmaker became inspired and immediately devised the story He fabricated most of the plot details and characters although he did use some historical figures in purely fictitious ways 7 Screenplay edit Herzog wrote the screenplay in a frenzy and completed it in two and a half days Much of the script was written during a 200 mile 320 km bus trip with Herzog s football team His teammates got drunk after winning a game and one vomited on several pages of Herzog s manuscript which he immediately threw out the window Herzog claims he cannot remember all of what he wrote on these pages 7 The screenplay was mostly shot as written with only minor differences In an early scene in which Pizarro instructs Ursua to lead the scouting team down the river in the script Pizarro mentions that in the course of the expedition Ursua could possibly discover what happened to Francisco de Orellana s expedition which had vanished without a trace years before see Historical Accuracy section Later in the screenplay Aguirre and his men find a boat and the long dead remains of Orellana s soldiers 8 Further down the river they discover another ship lodged in some tree tops In the screenplay Aguirre and others explore the boat but find no sign of Orellana or his men Herzog ultimately eliminated any such references to Orellana s expedition from the film The sequence with the boat caught in the upper branches of a tree remains but as filmed it seems to be simply a hallucinatory vision 8 The finale is significantly different from Herzog s original script The director recalled I only remember that the end of the film was totally different The end was actually the raft going out into the open ocean and being swept back inland because for many miles you have a counter current the Amazon actually goes backwards And it was tossed to and fro And a parrot would scream El Dorado El Dorado 9 This ending was eventually used for Cobra Verde Herzog and Kinski edit Herzog s first choice for the role of Aguirre was actor Klaus Kinski The two had met many years earlier when the then struggling young actor rented a room in Herzog s family apartment and Kinski s often terrifying and deranged antics during the three months he lived there left a lasting impression on the director Years later Herzog remembered the volatile actor and knew that he was the only possible man who could play the mad Aguirre and he sent Kinski a copy of the screenplay Between three and four in the morning the phone rang Herzog recalled It took me at least a couple of minutes before I realized that it was Kinski who was the source of this inarticulate screaming And after an hour of this it dawned on me that he found it the most fascinating screenplay and wanted to be Aguirre 10 From the beginning of the production Herzog and Kinski argued about the proper manner to portray Aguirre Kinski wanted to play a wild ranting madman but Herzog wanted something quieter more menacing In order to get the performance he desired before each shot Herzog would deliberately infuriate Kinski After waiting for the hot tempered actor s anger to burn itself out Herzog would then roll the camera 11 On one occasion irritated by the noise from a hut where cast and crew were playing cards the explosive Kinski fired three gunshots at it blowing the tip off one extra s finger 7 Subsequently Kinski decided to leave the jungle location over Herzog s refusal to fire a sound assistant only changing his mind after Herzog threatened to shoot first Kinski and then himself The latter incident has given rise to the legend that Herzog made Kinski act for him at gunpoint However Herzog has repeatedly denied the claim during interviews saying he only verbally threatened Kinski in the heat of the moment in a desperate attempt to keep him from leaving the set 12 The incident is parodied in Incident at Loch Ness which Herzog co wrote 13 Filming edit The film was made for US 370 000 with one third of the budget paying for Kinski s salary 14 It was filmed on location in the Peruvian rainforest Machu Picchu the stone steps of Huayna Picchu 14 and on the Amazon River tributaries of the Ucayali region Aguirre was shot in five weeks following nine months of pre production planning 7 The film was shot in chronological order because Herzog believed the film crew s progress on the river directly mirrored that of the explorers journey in the story The director and his cast and crew floated in rafts down the Huallaga and Nanay rivers through the Urubamba Valley in Peru 14 All of the actors spoke their dialogue in English The members of the cast and crew came from sixteen countries and English was the only common language among them In addition Herzog felt that shooting Aguirre in English would improve the film s chances for international distribution However the small amount of money that had been set aside for post synchronization left Peru with the man in charge of the process both absconded en route The English language track was ultimately replaced by a higher quality German language version which was post synched after production was completed 5 Herzog claims that Kinski requested too much money for the dubbing session and so his lines were performed by another actor 15 The low budget precluded the use of stunt men or elaborate special effects Cinematography in many scenes was done in order to accommodate the inclement weather and terrain of the region with the camera lens often being obscured by rainwater and mud when the cast moved through thicker regions of the jungle The cast and crew climbed up mountains experienced the adverse conditions of the jungle and rode Amazonian river rapids on rafts built by locals At one point a storm caused a river to flood covering the film sets in several feet of water and destroying all the rafts built for the film This flooding was immediately incorporated into the story as a sequence including a flood and subsequent rebuilding of rafts was shot 7 The camera used to shoot the film was stolen by Herzog from the Munich Film School 16 Years later Herzog recalled It was a very simple 35mm camera one I used on many other films so I do not consider it a theft For me it was truly a necessity I wanted to make films and needed a camera I had some sort of natural right to this tool If you need air to breathe and you are locked in a room you have to take a chisel and hammer and break down a wall It is your absolute right 14 To obtain the monkeys used in the climactic sequence Herzog paid several locals to trap 400 monkeys He paid them half in advance and was to pay the other half upon receipt The trappers sold the monkeys to someone in Los Angeles or Miami and Herzog came to the airport just as the monkeys were being loaded to be shipped out of the country He pretended to be a veterinarian and claimed that the monkeys needed vaccinations before leaving the country Abashed the handlers handed the monkeys over to Herzog who used them in the shot they were required for then released them afterwards into the jungle 7 Music edit Main article Aguirre soundtrack Aguirre s musical score was performed by Popol Vuh a West German progressive Krautrock band The band was formed in 1969 by keyboardist Florian Fricke who had known Herzog for several years prior to the formation of the band 17 He had appeared as an actor in the director s first full length film Signs of Life 1968 playing a pianist Aguirre was only the first of many collaborations between the band and the director Popol Vuh s hypnotic music 18 for Aguirre met with considerable acclaim Roger Ebert wrote The music sets the tone It is haunting ecclesiastical human and yet something else T he music is crucial to Aguirre the Wrath of God 19 AllMusic noted The film s central motif blends pulsing Moog and spectral voices conjured from Florian Fricke s Mellotron related choir organ to achieve something sublime in the truest sense of the word it s hard not to find the music s awe inspiring overwhelming beauty simultaneously unsettling The power of the legendary opening sequence of Herzog s film owes as much to Popol Vuh s music as it does to the director s mise en scene 20 Herzog explained how the choir like sound was created We used a strange instrument which we called a choir organ It has inside it three dozen different tapes running parallel to each other in loops All these tapes are running at the same time and there is a keyboard on which you can play them like an organ so that it will sound just like a human choir but yet at the same time very artificial and really quite eerie 19 In 1975 Popol Vuh released an album entitled Aguirre Although ostensibly a soundtrack album to Herzog s film the six track LP included only two songs Aguirre I L Acrime Di Rei and Aguirre II taken from Aguirre the Wrath of God The four remaining tracks were derived from various recordings made by the group between about 1972 and 1974 At the time of Aguirre the band members were Fricke piano Mellotron Fichelscher electric guitar acoustic guitar drums Djong Yun vocals and Robert Eliscu oboe pan pipe Wings of Hope edit While Herzog was location scouting for Aguirre the Wrath of God in Peru his reservation on LANSA Flight 508 had been canceled due to a last minute change in itinerary During this flight the airplane disintegrated in mid air after a lightning strike and crashed in the Peruvian Amazon rainforest in 1971 killing 91 people except the sole survivor 17 year old Juliane Koepcke Herzog was inspired to make the 1998 documentary film Wings of Hope about Koepcke s survival of the aviation disaster and in the jungle since he had narrowly avoided taking the same flight 21 Reception editCritical response edit The film was produced in part by West German television station Hessischer Rundfunk which televised the film on the same day it opened in theatres Herzog has blamed this for the relatively poor commercial reception of the film in Germany 14 However outside Germany the film became an enormous cult favorite in such places as Mexico Venezuela and Algiers 22 The film had a theatrical run of fifteen months in Paris 23 Aguirre received a theatrical release in the United States in 1977 by New Yorker Films It immediately became a cult film and New Yorker Films reported four years after its initial release that it was the only film in its catalog that never went out of circulation 22 In Germany the Suddeutsche Zeitung described the film as a colour drenched violently physical moving painting 24 The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung described Kinski s acting as too theatrical to embody God s wrath 24 In the US and the UK the film received mostly positive critical notices upon release Vincent Canby writing in The New York Times called it A bsolutely stunning Mr Herzog views all the proceedings with fixed detachment He remains cool He takes no sides He may even be slightly amused Mainly he is a poet who constantly surprises us with unexpected juxtapositions This is a splendid and haunting work 25 In Time Richard Schickel opined that Herzog does the audience the honor of allowing it to discover the blindnesses and obsessions the sober lunacies he quietly lays out on the screen Well acted most notably by Klaus Kinski in the title role gloriously photographed by Thomas Mauch Aguirre is not to put too fine a point on it a movie that makes a convincing claim to greatness 26 Time Out s Tony Rayns noted each scene and each detail is honed down to its salient features On this level the film effectively pre empts analysis by analysing itself as it proceeds admitting no ambiguity Yet at the same time Herzog s flair for charged explosive imagery has never had freer rein and the film is rich in oneiric moments 27 Legacy edit The film s reputation through the years has continued to grow On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes 96 of 50 critics gave the film a positive review with an average rating of 9 10 The site s critics consensus reads A haunting journey of natural wonder and tangible danger Aguirre transcends epic genre trappings and becomes mythological by its own right 28 J Hoberman has written that Aguirre is not just a great movie but an essential one Herzog s third feature is both a landmark film and a magnificent social metaphor 29 Danny Peary wrote To see Aguirre for the first time is to discover a genuine masterpiece It is overwhelming spellbinding at first dreamlike and then hallucinatory 22 Roger Ebert has added it to his list of The Great Movies 19 and in a 2002 Sight amp Sound poll of critics and filmmakers on the best films ever made Ebert listed it in his top ten 30 In the same poll critic Nigel Andrews and director Santosh Sivan also placed it in their top ten list 31 Martin Scorsese included it on a list of 39 Essential Foreign Films for a Young Filmmaker 32 In 1999 Rolling Stone included the film on the magazine s 100 Maverick Movies of the Last 100 Years list 33 Aguirre was included in Time magazine s All Time 100 Best Films compiled by Richard Schickel and Richard Corliss 34 Entertainment Weekly named it the 46th greatest cult film ever made 35 The film was ranked 19 in Empire magazine s The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema in 2010 36 Aguirre has won several prestigious film awards In 1973 it won the Deutscher Filmpreis German Film Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement Cinematography 37 In 1976 it was voted the Best Foreign Film by the French Syndicate of Film Critics 38 39 In 1977 the National Society of Film Critics US gave it their Best Cinematography Award 40 It won the prestigious Grand Prix of the Belgian Film Critics Association in 1976 and was nominated for a Best Film Cesar Award 41 Influence edit Francis Ford Coppola s 1979 film Apocalypse Now a film based on Joseph Conrad s 1902 novella Heart of Darkness was influenced also by Aguirre as it contains seemingly deliberate visual quotations of Herzog s film 42 43 44 Coppola himself has noted Aguirre with its incredible imagery was a very strong influence I d be remiss if I didn t mention it 45 Several critics have noted that Aguirre appears to have had a direct influence on several other films Martin Rubin has written that a mong the films strongly influenced by Aguirre are Coppola s Apocalypse Now and Terrence Malick s The New World 2005 42 J Hoberman agreed noting that Herzog s sui generis Amazon fever dream was the influence Malick s over inflated New World can t shake 29 Channel 4 opined This is an astonishing deceptively simple pocket sized epic whose influence in terms of both style and narrative is seen in films as diverse as Apocalypse Now The Mission Predator and The Blair Witch Project 1999 46 Historical accuracy editAlthough plot details and many of the characters in Aguirre come directly from Herzog s own imagination historians have pointed out that the film fairly accurately incorporates some 16th century events and historical personages into a fictional narrative Herzog s screenplay merged two expeditions one led by Gonzalo Pizarro in 1541 which resulted in the discovery by Europeans of the Amazon River by Francisco de Orellana and another one that occurred in 1560 The expedition of Gonzalo Pizarro and his men left from the city of Quito and entered the Amazon basin in search of El Dorado Various troubles afflicted the expedition and sure that El Dorado was very close Pizarro set up a smaller group led by Francisco de Orellana to break off from the main group and forge ahead then return with news of what they had found This group utilized a brigantine to journey down the river After failing to find the legendary city Orellana was unable to return because of the current and he and his men continued to follow the Napo River until he reached the estuary of the Amazon in 1542 Accompanying Orellana was Gaspar de Carvajal who kept a journal of the group s experiences The historic Gaspar de Carvajal 1500 1584 was a Spanish Dominican friar who had settled in Peru and dedicated himself to the conversion of the Indigenous peoples His general attitude towards the local people was consistent with the benevolence of his better known brother Dominican friar Bartolome de las Casas citation needed This personality is at odds with the description in the film where Carvajal is portrayed as a cowardly priest who claimed that the church was always on the side of the strong 8 The film s major characters Aguirre Ursua Don Fernando Inez and Flores were involved in the second expedition which left Peru in 1560 to find the city of El Dorado Commissioned by Peru s governor Ursua organized an expeditionary group of 300 men to travel by way of the Amazon River He was accompanied by his mixed race mistress Dona Inez At one point during the journey Aguirre a professional soldier decided that he could use the 300 men to overthrow the Spanish rule of Peru Aguirre had Ursua murdered and proclaimed Fernando as The Prince of Peru 47 Fernando himself was eventually murdered when he questioned Aguirre s scheme of sailing to the Atlantic conquering Panama crossing the isthmus and invading Peru Many others who attempted to rebel against Aguirre were also killed The surviving soldiers conquered Isla Margarita off the coast of Venezuela and made preparations to attack the mainland 47 By that time Spanish authorities had learned of Aguirre s plans When the rebels arrived in Venezuela government agents offered full pardons to Aguirre s men All of them accepted the deal Immediately prior to his arrest Aguirre murdered his daughter Flores who had remained by his side during the entire journey He was then captured and dismembered 47 Other Spanish expeditions outside the Amazon influenced the story The conversation in which the local inhabitants refuse a Bible comes from events before the Battle of Cajamarca in which Inca emperor Atahualpa allegedly rejected the Requerimiento The chronicle of Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca La Relacion The Account mentions the appearance of a boat in a treetop after a fierce tropical storm in Hispaniola Monday morning we went down to the port and did not find the ships We saw their buoys in the water from which we realized that they had been lost and we went along the coast to see if we could find signs of them Since we found nothing we went into the woods and a quarter of a league into them we found one of the ship s boats in some trees Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca 48 Kinski s crazed performance bore similarities to the real Aguirre a true homicidal megalomaniac Many of his fellow soldiers considered his actions to be that of a madman 8 Kinski s use of a limp reflected a limp that Aguirre had the result of a battle injury Aguirre s frequent short but impassioned speeches to his men in the film were accurately based on the man s noted simple but effective rhetorical ability 47 The South Atlantic Review observes the film s attitude toward historical accuracy as being similar to works of Shakespeare Like Shakespeare Herzog begins with chronicle accounts of events and personages but then re shapes and embroiders upon these historical chronicles at once providing answers and revealing more puzzling questions not only turning history into art a tenuous distinction in any case but meditating upon the makers and the making of history Gregory A Waller 47 Additionally noted is the juxtaposition of Spanish imperialism with that of Nazism specifically citing Aguirre s deranged closing speech as historical analogy with Hitler and German fascism Film Quarterly further expands on this point marking the casting of Kinski as emblematic of this historical parallel Herzog achieves this dimension by choosing an actor with typically Nordic coloring Klaus Kinski with his blond hair and blue eyes According to historical accounts Aguirre was of short stature sparely made ill featured the face small and lean the beard black Herzog s Aguirre is not of short stature but although he is not very tall his deformity causes him to stand out Unlike the historical Aguirre this one has unusually large features and is beardless and blond Through this blond Nordic knight Herzog alludes to a much earlier age of expansionism to medieval Germany with the religious imperialism of the Crusaders and the Teutonic Knights and also to a more recent period the 1930s which combined the rebirth of the Nordic stereotype seen in the light of racial superiority with Hitler s attempts at imperialist conquest Herzog s main character is more than a conquistador of one particular century he is the embodiment of imperialism as such Seen in this light Herzog s re creation of a specific period in history i e Spain s conquests in the New World becomes a treatise on the evils of imperialism through the ages It is not surprising then that Herzog s film constitutes a great flight of fancy mostly leaving historical data behind and making instead a collage of fact and fiction 49 While film journalists acknowledge the various liberties taken within the film s depiction of historical events these choices are observed as creative decisions on the part of the director both in service of the narrative structure and also as reflections of imperialist and fascist manifestations occurring throughout history both prior to and following the 16th century conquest of South America Kinski s manic performance combined with the film s blunt portrayal of violence toward the native population acts less as a literal portrayal of events and more as broad condemnation of both historical events and the concept of imperialist conquest See also editJohn OkelloReferences edit Aguirre der Zorn Gottes Filmverlag der Autoren Retrieved 5 August 2017 a b Aguirre Wrath of God 1972 British Film Institute Archived from the original on 11 February 2016 Aguirre der Zorn Gottes Lumiere Retrieved 17 March 2019 Aguirre La Ira de Dios Aguirre Der Zorn Gottes ruidoblanco Ruido Blanco FM in Mexican Spanish 3 October 2022 Retrieved 29 March 2023 a b Overbey David Movies of the Seventies pg 162 Edited by Ann Lloyd Orbis Books 1984 ISBN 0 85613 640 9 The film was shot MOS in English but was primarily released in a German dubbed version Business Data for Aguirre der Zorn Gottes Internet Movie Database Retrieved 19 March 2007 a b c d e f Herzog Werner Aguirre the Wrath of God DVD Anchor Bay Entertainment 2001 audio commentary OCLC 228418112 a b c d Fritze Ronald 1985 Werner Herzog s Adaptation of History in Aguirre The Wrath of God Film amp History An Interdisciplinary Journal of Film and Television Studies 15 4 74 86 doi 10 1353 flm 1985 a402266 S2CID 191781266 Project MUSE 402266 ProQuest 1308280267 Herzog Werner The Trail of Werner Herzog An Interview Off Screen Retrieved 8 May 2007 O Mahony John 20 March 2002 The Enigma of Werner H The Guardian London Knipfel Jim Aguirre the Wrath of God DVD Anchor Bay Entertainment 2001 liner notes Dickson Mary 27 April 1998 Hauntingly Herzog City Weekly Salt Lake City Scheib Richard 21 March 2009 Incident at Loch Ness Moria The Science Fiction Horror and Fantasy Film Review Archived from the original on 12 March 2012 Retrieved 7 September 2009 a b c d e Herzog Werner Herzog on Herzog edited by Paul Cronin Faber amp Faber 2003 ISBN 0 571 20708 1 Ebert Roger A conversation with Werner Herzog rogerebert com Archived from the original on 10 September 2005 Retrieved 19 June 2007 Bissell Tom December 2006 The Secret Mainstream Contemplating the mirages of Werner Herzog Harper s Magazine Augustin Gerhard Florian Fricke Interview Eurock Archived from the original on 15 October 2007 Retrieved 30 October 2007 Schager Nick Aguirre The Wrath of God Slant Magazine Archived from the original on 13 December 2007 Retrieved 30 October 2007 a b c Ebert Roger 4 April 1999 Aguirre the Wrath of God RogerEbert com Chicago Sun Times Retrieved 24 February 2024 Wilson Neate Aguirre Review Allmusic Retrieved 30 October 2007 Herzog Werner 2001 Herzog on Herzog Faber and Faber ISBN 0 571 20708 1 a b c Peary Danny Cult Movies Delta Books 1981 ISBN 0 517 20185 2 Young Vernon 1977 Much Madness Werner Herzog and Contemporary German Cinema The Hudson Review 30 3 409 414 doi 10 2307 3850276 JSTOR 3850276 a b Baumgardt Carsten Aguirre Der Zorn Gottes German language FilmStarts Archived from the original on 28 February 2009 Retrieved 24 March 2009 Canby Vincent 4 April 1977 Aguirre the Wrath of God Haunting Film by Herzog The New York Times Schickel Richard 16 May 1977 Meditation on Madness Time New York Archived from the original on 8 January 2007 Rayns Tony Aguirre Wrath of God Time Out Film guide Retrieved 14 March 2007 Aguirre the Wrath of God 1972 Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media Retrieved 9 August 2021 a b Hoberman J 10 October 2006 Jungle Fevers Village Voice New York Archived from the original on 6 March 2007 Ebert Roger How the Directors and Critics Voted Roger Ebert Sight amp Sound BFI Archived from the original on 10 March 2007 Retrieved 2007 03 14 Sivan Santosh How the Directors and Critics Voted Santosh Sivan Sight amp Sound BFI Archived from the original on 15 December 2007 Retrieved 21 November 2007 Martin Scorsese Creates a List of 39 Essential Foreign Films for a Young Filmmaker Open Culture 15 October 2014 Archived from the original on 7 February 2015 Retrieved 1 February 2015 Rolling Stone 100 Maverick Movies of the Last 100 Years Filmsite com Retrieved 28 December 2007 Corliss Richard Schickel Richard 12 February 2005 All Time 100 Best Films Time ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 15 March 2024 The Top Cult Movies Archived 26 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine Entertainment Weekly The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema Aguirre the Wrath of God Empire Retrieved 18 April 2013 Deutsche Filmpreise von 1951 2004 in German www deutsche filmakademie de Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 13 August 2007 Film Archive Aguirre The Wrath of God German Films Archived from the original on 23 November 2010 Retrieved 12 August 2007 Awards for Aguirre der Zorn Gottes Internet Movie Database Retrieved 6 May 2007 Past Winners Database 1977 12th National Society of Film Critics Awards Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 16 August 2007 Retrieved 2007 08 13 Anciennes Editions in French www lescesarducinema com Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 2007 08 12 a b Rubin Martin Werner Herzog Visionary at Large Gene Siskel Film Center Archived from the original on 24 February 2007 Retrieved 14 March 2007 Aguirre the Wrath of God Channel 4 Film Retrieved 14 March 2007 Sterritt David Coppola Apocalypse Now and the Ambivalent 70 s DavidSterritt com Retrieved 14 March 2007 Peary Gerald Francis Ford Coppola Interview with Gerald Peary GeraldPeary com Retrieved 14 March 2007 Aguirre The Wrath of God www channel4 com Archived from the original on 6 August 2007 Retrieved 13 August 2007 a b c d e Waller Gregory A 1981 Aguirre The Wrath of God History Theater and the Camera South Atlantic Review 46 2 55 69 doi 10 2307 3199461 JSTOR 3199461 Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca The Account and Commentaries of Governor Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca Chapter One Stiles Victoria M 1989 Fact and Fiction Nature s Endgame in Werner Herzog s Aguirre the Wrath of God Literature Film Quarterly 17 3 Salisbury 161 167 ProQuest 226990358 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Aguirre the Wrath of God Aguirre the Wrath of God at AllMovie Aguirre the Wrath of God at IMDb nbsp Aguirre the Wrath of God at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aguirre the Wrath of God amp oldid 1221759806, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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