Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972) Reviews

Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972)
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The most famed and well-regarded collaboration between New German Cinema director Werner Herzog and his frequent leading man, Klaus Kinski, this epic historical drama was legendary for the arduousness of its on-location filming and the convincing zealous obsession employed by Kinski in playing the title role. Exhausted and near to admitting failure in its quest for riches, the 1650-51 expedition of Spanish conquistador Gonzalo Pizarro (Alejandro Repulles) bogs down in the impenetrable jungles of Peru. As a last-ditch effort to locate treasure, Pizarro orders a party to scout ahead for signs of El Dorado, the fabled seven cities of gold. In command are a trio of nobles, Pedro de Ursua (Ruy Guerra), Fernando de Guzman (Peter Berling), and Lope de Aguirre (Kinski). Traveling by river raft, the explorers are besieged by hostile natives, disease, starvation and treacherous waters. Crazed with greed and mad with power, Aguirre takes over the enterprise, slaughtering any that oppose him. Nature and Aguirre's own unquenchable thirst for glory ultimately render him insane, in charge of nothing but a raft of corpses and chattering monkeys. Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes (1973) was based on the real-life journals of a priest, Brother Gaspar de Carvajal (played in the film by Del Negro), who accompanied Pizarro on his ill-fated mission. ~ Karl Williams, Rovi

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Starring:
Klaus KinskiCecilia Rivera, (more)
Director(s):
Werner Herzog
Format(s):
DVD
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Average Ratings

(31 member reviews)  


Member Reviews


Steve M.

I enjoyed it. I saw this movie at age 10 when it first came out and I remembered the scene with the horse in the woodline. The director's commentary is interesting. Herzog purposely had Kinski shout out his energy off-camera so the performance would be subdued. The camera work and sound track are quite amazing for the time. But be advised it is an artsy film with stylized dialogue and violence, and an atypical ending for an action flick.

Yes   |   No


Allen S.

Masterpiece, all shot in peru on location, and that is a very hard thing to do......watch each camera angle, and camera shot....Klaus pulls it off, with non verbal acting.......Master piece!!!!!!!

Yes   |   No


Carol W.

Had this not been historically accurate, I might not have enjoyed it as much. But enjoy it I did, the story, the incredible scenery, and the photography. Carol W.

Yes   |   No


Marc L.

One of Herzog's best and a must see if you haven't yet. The making of this film is a story in and of itself! just like Herzog's film "Fitzcarraldo" Putting this vision of 16th century German explorers in Peru to find the mythical city of El Dorado is a seemingly crazy quest that many Europeans of that day thought was a real possibility. The viewer feels like you're part of the expedition itself while watching the movie: you feel exhausted and gone to extremes My Grade: A+ Marc L. Seattle, WA

Yes   |   No


BRONWYN D M.

I guess it was not my type of movie. The people had no expression at all. pretty scary. I found it depressing. The only thing I enjoyed was the Indian flute player.

Yes   |   No


Greg B.

If you want to see the mountains of Peru, then maybe rent this movie. Historically inaccurate and terrible story line

Yes   |   No


Rod B.

Do you like irony? This is the kind of irony that comes across from the state of mind of the characters, clinging to their image of themselves as conquerors, tied to destructive dogma but utterly lost in a new world. The movie is very engaging and Kinsky is himself: pompous, arrogant, misfit -- which perfectly matches the need of the character.

Yes   |   No


Randy B.

kinski is asleep for most of the tripe. when he is ambulatory his campiness seems to suggest that he was there for the paycheck. the dialogue was less than inspriring. it reminded me of the old $1 chop socky poorly written worse in the dubbing that used to grace the screens of the discount movie houses.

Yes   |   No


Scott V.

Slow but powerful and memorable

Yes   |   No


Amanda C.

This was a horrid film. Boring and historically inaccurate. Not only was it diffulcult to endure Spaniards speaking german, but Africans were not conquistadores! Please don't waste your time. Do yourself a favor and skip this ridiculous waste of film.

Yes   |   No


 
 
 

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    Member Reviews
     
    Steve M.

    I enjoyed it. I saw this movie at age 10 when it first came out and I remembered the scene with the horse in the woodline. The director's commentary is interesting. Herzog purposely had Kinski shout out his energy off-camera so the performance would be subdued. The camera work and sound track are quite amazing for the time. But be advised it is an artsy film with stylized dialogue and violence, and an atypical ending for an action flick.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Allen S.

    Masterpiece, all shot in peru on location, and that is a very hard thing to do......watch each camera angle, and camera shot....Klaus pulls it off, with non verbal acting.......Master piece!!!!!!!

    Yes   |   No

     
    Carol W.

    Had this not been historically accurate, I might not have enjoyed it as much. But enjoy it I did, the story, the incredible scenery, and the photography. Carol W.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Read All 31 Reviews