If
you have a dream, the only way to accomplish it is to face
it head on. If your dream requires you to drag a massive boat
up a mountainside, do it. So says director Werner Herzog in
the bizarre but captivating Fitzcarraldo.
Klaus
Kinski plays Brian Sweeney Fitzgerald, or Fitzcarraldo as
the Peruvian natives call him, an eccentric entrepreneur who
dreams of building an extravagant opera house in the middle
of the jungle. Like most extravagant things, money had to
be raised. The source of the overhead was to come in the form
of an emerging technology: rubber.
Fitzcarraldo
buys his claim, sets out into the deep jungle by boat and
soon discovers that his claim was only accessible by getting
over a mountain. Without the means to transport the rubber
trees he needed to make a fortune in rubber, Fitzcarraldo
decided to move the mode of transportation. Hatching a scheme
bigger than any jungle opera house, an idea is hatched that
sent the transport boat out of the water and onto a mountain.
Although
it's odd to hear a story about taking a big boat over a mountain,
in reality it had to happen for the film to happen. Fitzcarraldo
is not a special effects extravaganza. It's the opposite,
shot straight on with reality in check. So for that to happen,
a boat actually had to go up the mountain.
Considering
Fitzcarraldo is a German/Peruvian film made outside
of the Hollywood hustle and bustle, it is a notoriously well-known
for its disastrous road to the screen. Much of the film had
been shot already when previous stars Jason Robards and Mick
Jagger were forced to drop out and have Kinski step in. That
sent budgets overflowing and kept the heat on Herzog to keep
going.
The
parallels between the story in the film and the story of making
the film are hard to ignore. Herzog is his own Fitzcarraldo,
chasing a dream that in the end nobody will be able to appreciate
the final product as much as the effort would have called
for.
Fitzcarraldo
is
a beautiful film that is a moving experience. Kinski exudes
an excentric tension that makes the titualr character both
frightening and endearing at the same time. He makes Fitzcarraldo
want his dream so bad that you almost overlook his take-no-prisoners
attitude.
The
parallels between life and reality in Fitzcarraldo
are intriguing. So much so, that they in many ways overshadow
the final product. While the real-life is in some ways more
interesting, the film isn't at all shabby either.
©Movie
Views; June 10, 2006
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