Tuesday, February 19, 2008

MYOFNF #7: Aguirre, the Wrath of God (dir. Werner Herzog, 1972)

Werner Herzog is considered the foremost auteur of obsessive personalities and Aguirre, is considered the centerpiece of his cinematic vision. Watching the film, I was surprised to notice how little Klaus Kinski's title character registers. This isn't a tightly focuses study of monomania like There Will Be Blood. Herzog's camera spends much less time zooming in on Kinski's rebellious conquistador than it does covering the hostile, wild tangle of Amazonian jungle surrounding him and his band of adventurers. Herzog is conveying to the audience the terrifying vulnerability and giddy freedom that comes with struggling through an untrammeled wilderness. Aguirre's individual psychology is less interesting than the universal reaction to such an environment. It's sort of like what No Country For Old Men would look like if Llewllyn Moss never made it back to the trailer park with his loot, but rather spent the film running around the scrub brush of West Texas.

4 comments:

Jesse Gant said...

Did you see Rescue Dawn by chance?

matthew christman said...

Not yet. Is it worth a damn?

Jesse Gant said...

Um, maybe. I think Herzog gets some brilliant performances out of the two leads, and Mr. Bale looks pretty damned awful near the end. He seems to be really good at starving himself?

But the end of the movie stuck in my throat like a fishbone--one of those ends that just doesn't make sense and maybe ruins the entire picture. We get our uplifting hero in the end, you know? It just felt a bit tired.

I'd wager you'd give it a 7.3 or thereabouts. Is that a strong endorsement?

matthew christman said...

It doesn't give me an antici-boner, that's for sure.