Aguirre, la colère de Dieu

  • Allemagne de l'Ouest Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes (plus)
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Résumés(1)

Descendu par la cordillère des Andes, un groupe de conquérants espagnols s’enfonce dans la forêt vierge. Constatant que l’avancée des soldats est rendue impossible par de multiples périls, Francisco Pizarro, conquérant du Pérou, confie à Pedro de Ursua un groupe d'une quarantaine d'hommes. Leur tâche est de descendre le fleuve au bout duquel ils espèrent trouver l’Eldorado, le pays de l’or vanté par les Incas. Très vite, Don Lope de Aguirre, le second féroce et déloyal d’Ursua, organise une mutinerie et se débarrasse de son rival. Il se déclare bientôt en session avec la couronne d’Espagne et embarque les révoltés qu’il a réussi à rallier à sa cause dans une conquête impossible de la mythique contrée pavée d'or. S’engage un combat perdu d’avance entre un Aguirre assoiffé de pouvoir et une nature plus hostile et impitoyable que lui encore. (LaCinetek)

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Critiques (5)

Lima 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Aguirre, The Wrath of God is a very peculiar film. A work with a strong theme and, for me, a mysterious hypnotic power. It's not a gripping film by any means, but as a whole it works. Herzog portrays the Spanish adventurer Aguirre (Klaus Kinski), who recklessly pursues his idea of success and wealth, even at the cost of the destruction of the members of his expedition, and gradually descends into madness. The film flows very slowly, probably like the river on which Aguirre's expedition sailed. If it's true that the actors didn't know their dialogue ten minutes before shooting a scene, it shows a lot in the film. The actors really look at times as if they don't know what to play, they resemble members of an amateur theatre company, but Herzog built everything on the demonic appearance of Klaus Kinski, who didn't even have to act much, it was enough that he IS. Some moments seem quite surreal (the bizarre scene with the severed head), sometimes even comical (e.g. the black man on the raft says "That is no ship. That is no forest", then an arrow flies in and buries into his leg, the black man remarks with stoic calm "That is no arrow", Kinski comes running and shouts "These arrows are real!" and fires the cannon right next to the black man's ear, which puts a big smile on the black man's face). Anyway, I give it four stars, the film really had a mysterious effect on me (maybe thanks to the dreamy hypnotic music), to the point that I was curious the whole time to see what would come next. Certainly, a film worth watching. ()

lamps 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Herzog captures how a quest for fame and immeasurable wealth turns into a manic depressive pilgrimage in a very believable way, relying on basic filmmaking techniques, simple camera rides and shots of beautiful sceneries, next to which he let the crazy face of the insane Klaus Kinski stand out, which in this case was really worth a thousand words. The thought that the likes of Iñárritu and Emmanuel Lubezki could have extracted much more voluminous cinematic art from the subject matter weighs on me, but even the minimalist Aguirre is an ageless visionary work with its aggressive psychological approach... 80% ()

Goldbeater 

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français Aguirre, la colère de Dieu et la folie d’un homme. Une création parfaite qui m’a immédiatement fait apprécier la collaboration entre Werner Herzog et Klaus Kinski. Tous deux ont fait un sans-faute et si vous n'êtes pas d’accord, vous serez découpé(e) en 198 morceaux et piétiné(e) jusqu’à devenir de la peinture pour les murs ! ()

Othello 

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anglais The blending of the reality of filming with the story being told is palpable here. An obsessed Herzog drags an exhausted film crew through the Peruvian jungle, capturing their exhaustion and setting it in the context of the universal futility and doom of human ambition. And in the process, he and Kinski fight over a gun. God knows how many people actually died in the making of this film; and sometimes you never find out. If Coppola was inspired by Aguirre when making Apocalypse Now, he couldn't have been surprised that it went the way it did. ()

kaylin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais This is a film that definitely won't appeal to everyone, but thanks to how confident Werner Herzog is in his directing and how unique Klaus Kinski is in his performance, I have to admit that this is simply a movie that is worth seeing. Some scenes - which were filmed in Peru - are truly beautifully grand and cameraman Thomas Mauch deserves applause. ()