Fitzcarraldo: “We’re gonna do what nobody’s ever done.”
Like a lot of films I love, the
bizarre and obsessive lead character of this film reflects the bizarre and
obsessive director who brought his vision to the screen. And like the character
Fitzcarraldo (portrayed with wide-eyed manic intensity by director Werner
Herzog’s “best fiend” Klaus Kinski), Herzog had his sights set on doing with
this film what nobody’s ever done, something that he decided – rightly, I’d say
– was unique enough to call himself "Conquistador of the Useless"
(later the name of a book of his production notes from the making of this
film).
A bit of back story first: in the
late 19th century, Carlos Fitzcarrald, an Irish-American-Peruvian
made a fortune selling rubber he claimed in a remote part of the Amazon jungle,
inaccessible by rapids in both directions on the nearest river. He managed to
access the river by crossing a narrow isthmus where the turbulent river is
separated from a second river by only a short mountain. Fitzcarrald sailed
upriver, dissembled his ship, reassembled it on the other side and voila!
he had access to the rubber tree forest in which he made his fortune.
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Back to the film: Herzog, after
several setbacks, drafted Kinski to portray Brian Sweeney Fitzgerald
(pronounced “Fitzcarraldo,” we’re told, because the locals couldn’t say
“Fitzgerald”) and I can’t imagine that he could possibly have made a better
choice, with Kinski’s wild face and intense stare conveying without a single
sound out of his mouth the desire his character has to make his fortune. But he
has no real desire to get rich – his dream is to bring the opera to the town of
Iquitos where he lives and have the finest opera house in the jungle, a place
so grand that he can have Caruso open it and have his pet pig sit in his own
box and a red velvet chair. He’s tried two other moneymaking enterprises before
to make his dream come true – the Trans-Andean railway (“but the project fell
through”) and now an ice factory (“What good is ice here? To cool the rubber?”)
and has now settled on becoming the latest rubber baron by crossing the
mountain with his steamship.
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For more
about the film, I’d also direct you to the superb documentary Burden of
Dreams, in which filmmaker Les Blank recounts the troubled production of
the film that dragged on over four years – a story nearly as legendary as the
film that actually made it to screen. Sick actors, injured crew, months of
footage that needed to be scrapped, on-set fights with cast and crew –
everything is detailed in Blank’s film that acts as a companion piece to Fitzcarraldo
itself and shows Herzog to be as much a mad dreamer as the character he put on
screen. If they’re not the same person at heart, they’re certainly two sides of
the same coin.
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