Plot
The story of Brian Sweeney Fitzgerald, an extremely determined man who intends to build an opera house in the middle of a jungle.
Release Year: 1982
Rating: 8.0/10 (12,205 voted)
Director:
Werner Herzog
Stars: Klaus Kinski, Claudia Cardinale, José Lewgoy
Storyline Fitzcarraldo is an obsessed opera lover who wants to build an opera in the jungle. To accomplish this he first has to make a fortune in the rubber business, and his cunning plan involves hauling an enormous river boat across a small mountain with aid from the local Indians.
Cast: Klaus Kinski
-
Brian Sweeney Fitzgerald - 'Fitzcarraldo'
Claudia Cardinale
-
Molly
José Lewgoy
-
Don Aquilino
Miguel Ángel Fuentes
-
Cholo
Paul Hittscher
-
Captain (Orinoco Paul)
Huerequeque Enrique Bohorquez
-
Huerequeque (The Cook)
(as Huerequeque Enrique Bohórquez)
Grande Otelo
-
Station master
(as Grande Othelo)
Peter Berling
-
Opera Manager
David Pérez Espinosa
-
Chief of Campa Indians
Milton Nascimento
-
Blackman At Opera House
Ruy Polanah
-
Rubber Baron
Salvador Godínez
-
Old Missionary
Dieter Milz
-
Young Missionary
William Rose
-
Notary
(as Bill Rose)
Leoncio Bueno
-
Release Date: 10 October 1982
Filming Locations: Amazon Basin, Brazil
Gross: HKD 72,937
(Hong Kong)
(1986)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
Was shot in English, since many of the actors on the set couldn't speak German.
Goofs:
Crew or equipment visible:
During one of the boat drifting scenes, crew members can be seen at the top of the boat, including a man wearing jeans who tries to avoid being spotted by the camera.
Quotes: Brian Sweeney Fitzgerald - 'Fitzcarraldo':
This church remains closed until this town has its opera house. I want the opera house.
[shouting and ringing the church bells]
Brian Sweeney Fitzgerald - 'Fitzcarraldo':
I want my opera house! I want the opera house! This church remains closed until this town has its opera house. I want my opera house! I want my opera house! I want my opera house!
User Review
An eccentric visionary brings opera to the jungle
Rating: 10/10
Based on a historic figure, this is the story of Brian Sweeney
Fitzgerald (Klaus Kinski), known as "Fitzcarraldo", an eccentric
visionary living in Amazonia. He first tried building a Trans-Andean
Railroad, but went bankrupt. When we meet him, he's trying to make a
living by selling ice to Amazonia natives, although we first see him on
a small boat with his sometimes significant other, Molly (Claudia
Cardinale). They've traveled 1200 miles down the Amazon to an opera
house to hear Enrico Caruso sing, because Fitzcarraldo is an opera
fanatic who especially loves Caruso. He loves opera so much that he
dreams of building an opera house in the relatively remote outpost of
Iquitos, Peru, where he's been living. Understandably unable to find
backers for such a venture among Iquitos' wealthy rubber industry
leaders, Fitzcarraldo hits upon a scheme for making a bundle of money,
and which would eventually enable him to fund the opera house himself.
Unfortunately, not all goes as planned.
Fitzcarraldo was a notoriously difficult film to make. Documentarian
Les Blank even made his own film detailing some of the difficulties and
apparent ironies, The Burden of Dreams (1982). Director Werner Herzog
hauled his cast and crew to Amazonia for the shoot, where they ended up
trapped in the rain forest for months. At one point the filmmakers'
camp was set fire by Indians who objected to the production, there was
an air crash in which some of the crew died, and a couple outrageous
"stunts" in the film--including the main plot device of the
climax--actually were outrageous, dangerous tasks rather than safe
effects/model shots, as we'd expect them to be. Just the idea of
pulling off the main stunt caused the Brazilian engineer initially
associated with the project to abandon involvement. A number of cast
members also backed out, including Mick Jagger and Jason Robards, who
were both signed on at different points to play Kinski's role.
Knowledge of these kinds of issues makes Fitzcarraldo even more fun to
watch, and makes the fact that it was completed at all, not to mention
that it is such an elegant masterpiece, more remarkable.
The tone of Fitzcarraldo overall closely matches Kinski's depiction of
titular character. It is quirky and surreal, but very subtly yet
satisfyingly so, with both an almost garish bizarreness (Kinski is
quite odd looking in a way) balanced with a sublime beauty. Herzog
imbues the film with a lot of gorgeous cinematography, enhanced by his
unique sense of pacing. For example, he'll set the mood of a dawn/dusk
scene with a lingering shot of a colorful sky, which then functions as
symbolic of a night's events without directly showing them. Herzog
matches this same technique in his action--he has an ability to say as
much with what he doesn't show his actors doing (or saying) as with
more conspicuous content.
Herzog also shows himself to be a master of selecting music to enhance
mood and tell a story, as he balances an atmospheric Brian Eno-ish
score from Popol Vuh, native jungle music, and vintage turn or the
century recordings of Caruso singing Bellini, Verdi, Puccini and such.
Of course opera is an important plot device that enters the film at
various critical points. Even if you don't like opera, however, Herzog
and Kinski make it (and the motivation for it) attractive in context,
and you may just find this film beginning to turn around your feelings
for that music.
It's interesting to note that even with Herzog's unusual pacing, the
flow of the film always seems "natural". Fitzcarraldo also has an
unusual plot structure, as it almost stream-of-consciously moves from
opera in a formal European-seeming setting to a historical dramatic
depiction of eccentrics in a native-filled Peruvian town, and then to
an exciting adventure tale that is the heart of the film before it
finally reaches an irony-filled, beautifully surreal dénouement. The
constant throughout all of this is Fitzcarraldo, of course, who can't
help being eccentric but charming, both to the film's audience and to
other characters.
Fitzcarraldo is often interpreted as being somewhat critical of western
encroachment on other cultures, such as Amazonia. Under this view,
Herzog is usually seen as ironically "guilty" of the same actions that
he's indicting. However, the film does not read as criticism to me.
It's much more in line with what is usually considered to be a romantic
tendency in Herzog. Fitzcarraldo is not at all a villain in the film,
and neither are the European rubber barons. Instead, Fitzcarraldo is
lovable and admirable if a bit crazy. The introduction of western
culture doesn't end up being a negative. The natives in the film still
retain their unique identities, and efforts are made to interact with
them in their manner, not to adapt them to Eurocentrism. Cultural
change may be inevitable with interaction, but the message of
Fitzcarraldo is more that the interaction can produce unique,
worthwhile cultures that are amalgamations of their precursors.
Another interesting subtext is that of Fitzcarraldo as Orpheus. Just as
Orpheus enchanted wild beasts, trees and rocks on Mount Olympus with
his lyre, causing them to "move from their places", Fitzcarraldo uses
opera to enchant the natural world in which he is ensconced, eventually
"moving mountains".
0