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Burden of Dreams
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Directed by Les Blank.
Documentarian Les Blank, who filmed Werner Herzog Eats His Shoe, trained his cameras on Herzog again, as the eccentric German filmmaker made his epic, Fitzcarraldo, in the Amazon rainforest of Peru. Herzog's production is in trouble right from the start. He begins filming with Jason Robards playing the title role, and Mick Jagger playing Fitzcarraldo's sidekick, Wilbur. With 40 percent of the film shot, Robards becomes ill and goes back to the states, where his doctor will not let him return. Because of the delay, Jagger, with album and tour commitments, is forced to quit the production. Thinking no one can fill the rock star's shoes, Herzog jettisons Jagger's role. He eventually casts his frequent collaborator Klaus Kinski as Fitzcarraldo and begins shooting again. Violent tribal disputes and unpredictable weather hinder the shoot, but the biggest obstacle is Herzog's own quixotic and dangerous determination to film one antique boat smashing down the Amazonian rapids, and the dragging of an identical boat over a mountain from one river to another. Blank interviews members of the cast and crew, including the impoverished Indian extras, and captures the troubles of the seemingly cursed production, but his interviews with Herzog are the focal point of the film. "If I abandon this project," Herzog explains at one point, "I would be a man without dreams, and I never want to live like that. I live my life or I end my life with this project." Herzog later made his own documentary about Kinski, My Best Fiend, which adds to the lore of this infamously difficult shoot. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
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quintquint The transposition of dreams
by quint in An inordinate number of peppers
liked it.
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"Burden of Dreams is necessary. This is a story that needs a good telling and Les Blank was there to capture it. It was obvious to Herzog, who was willing to play Fitzcarraldo himself if necessary, that Fitzcarraldo is the director of an experience. Kinski and Bruno S. have both played Herzog stand-ins. It's always interesting to hear Herzog speak. He is sometimes wise, sometimes full of bluster. An authentic person always. Here the pithy moment comes when Herzog pontificates about the transposition of dreams. He creates a dream on film hoping that it corresponds to the dream we are having. Despite his own vehement denial of Freud and introspection and deams themselves, he sees at the core of art this attempt to express a collective mythical experience. He imagines himself a sort of midwife fulfilling the dictates of something he refuses to look at. He is not the sort to really break it down for you in an interview. He is a man of action. A do-er.Whatever you might think of Herz ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Movie year countdown viewing pr ...
by Risselada in Risselada Blog
loved it.
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"This is a list for Round 2 of my movie year countdown viewing project as first described here. If by any strange chance whoever is reading this is actually following along you may notice that I'm still less than two thirds of the way through my original one. Well I'm starting this new one because as much as I love old movies it can get a little tedious watching just older movies. So I'm going to be blending my watching of the two lists together. Still focusing on the original one, but every once in a while sliding in the next entry from this new list.Again these new movies are limited to full length movies that are available on Netflix. And for this new round instead of picking a movie from every year, I will be picking a movie from every two years. For example the first movie must have come out during 2006 or 2007. The second movie must have come out in 2004 or 2005. The next in 2002 or 2003. You see.The list is not finished yet, but here is what I have decide ... " [More]
TheWorkingDeadTheWorkingDead Re: The Differentiation Of Horr ...
by TheWorkingDead in HORROR MOVIES 101
hasn't rated it.
"Ever watch House(the TV show, not the movie)? There's an episode where this patient says, after meeting House, 'That man must be a very good at his job...' '... because nobody that much of a jerk can be bad at his job and keep it' I'm paraphrasing, but that sums up what I think the attitude towards Kinski was, whenever he'd throw his tantrums.And yes, My Best Fiend is very good. Kinski was, according to Herzog, every bit the crazy mother that you'd expect. " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: The Differentiation Of Horr ...
by Risselada in HORROR MOVIES 101
loved it.
"I still haven't seen My Best Fiend or Burden of Dreams, but am very excited to.I find it interesting that someone who could throw such tantrums would be able to ultimately be such a good actor. And that people other than Herzog would ever even work with him.It's fascinating. " [More]
analogzombieanalogzombie Burden of Dreams
by analogzombie in analogzombie Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"In 1979 Werner Herzog set out to make Fittzcarraldo, a story about a caucho era rubber baron who tried to pull a steam ship over a mountain to bring opera to Quito. This a documentary about that shoot.With everything from native indian attacks, wild accusations about Herzog executing workers en masse, less than competant engineers, last minute recasting, screaming fits from the lead actor, and cost overages, the last thing Herzog had to worry about was actually pulling a real boat over a real mountain. Yet, he achieved that, and finished his film to boot. Burden of Dreams is a window into the mind of a mad genius. Herzog is shown as an artist so clear about his art that he will literally and metaphorically push himself, and those around him, to the brink of destruction. Director Les Blank's camera finds him at the production's most honest points. He chooses to focus on the lives of the natives that have come to take part in the film, as much as on Kinski and the director. W ... " [More]
analogzombieanalogzombie My Best Fiend
by analogzombie in analogzombie Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"My Best Fiend was made by Werner Herzog after Klaus Kinski's death and chronicles the tumultuous relationship between the director and the actor most often associated with him. Together they made five films over a 15 year period, but their connection extends much deeper into childhood, when they lived together for a short while. As Herzog dissects his friend it becomes clear that Kinski was more than a raving lunatic or mad genius. He was a man tormented by his desire to succeed and his will to dominate, a man forever impatient with those who he saw as standing in his way. What emerges over the course of the documentary is how complimentary the two truly were. Only Herzog seems capable of withstanding Kinski's fits, and pushing him to his greatest acting achievements. In his heart Kinski knew that he needed someone as equally obstinate as himself to drive him forward. This truth served as the bedrock for a friendship that would endure twin murder plots, threats of film sabo ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: Top 5 Movies About Making M ...
by Risselada in Top 5
loved it.
"I've been pretty interested in seeing this one. I don't know why I haven't yet. Maybe because I always wanted to read Don Quixote before I saw a movie of it. Then again this isn't even a movie of it. It's about trying to make a movie of it. Ok I'm anal.Going along with this sort of type of movie, I'm also very VERY interested in seeing Burden of Dreams. I'm not sure why I haven't gotten to that one yet. " [More]
chesterfilmschesterfilms Re: Top 5 Sea/Water Movies
by chesterfilms in chesterfilms Blog
loved it.
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"1. Jaws (1975)What more can be said about this film. This film never gets old, and it's still just as frightening today as it was on my first viewing. Unbelievable direction (understatement of the year).2. Fitzcarraldo (1982)The greatest scene in this film has a boat in it, but the boat is being pulled over a mountain (does that still count). An incredibly ambitious film about an incredibly ambitious man. 3. Lifeboat (1944)When the whole movie takes place in a life boat you better have a great story, and a great cast. Thankfully it's Hitchcock, so the tension and suspense is always building. 4. The African Queen (1951) Boogie and Hepburn on the run from German troupes. Battling crocodiles, rapids, and everything else that the African jungle throws at them. Huston makes a film that goes into my small list of perfect films. 5. Burden Of Dreams (1982)I'm gonna throw a curve ball here. Les Bank's documentary chronicling the production of Fitzcarraldo is a perfect exa ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
Les Blank's film about the making of Werner Herzog's Fitzcarraldo is a fascinating portrait of a filmmaker pushed to the outer edge of sanity by a difficult film shoot, and by his obsession with seeing his vision captured on the screen. Just as the film Herzog is making shows a man (Fitzcarraldo, played by Klaus Kinski) whose passion for opera drives him to a mad and self-destructive act of incredible hubris, the film Blank has made shows a man (Herzog) whose passion for his own art drives him to a similar mad and self-destructive act. Like Hearts of Darkness (Fax Bahr and George Hickenlooper's invaluable document of the making of Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now), Burden of Dreams paints a somewhat troubling picture of a fiercely intelligent and supremely talented, but megalomaniacal filmmaker, who will stop at nothing to see his brilliant vision realized. The profound respect that Herzog professes to have for the tribal culture Amazonian Indians stands in sharp contrast to the way they are treated on his set, and Blank effectively captures this disparity. He also captures the degradation of Herzog's keen mind, as the jungle apparently begins to drive him mad. "Nature here is vile and base," he explains, as the elements threaten to derail his film, "The trees are in misery. The birds here are in misery. I don't think they sing -- they just screech in pain." Late in the shoot, as the filming hits snag after snag, Herzog laments, with a rueful smile, "I shouldn't make movies anymore. I should go to a lunatic asylum right away." Burden of Dreams is a tale of obsession as compelling and disturbing as the film it documents. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
 



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