El Topo (1971) USA
El Topo Image Cover
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Director:Alejandro Jodorowsky
Studio:Starz / Anchor Bay
Producer:Moshe Rosemberg, Roberto Viskin, Juan López Moctezuma
Writer:Alejandro Jodorowsky
Rating:4.5 (62 votes)
Rated:Unrated
Date Added:2008-05-13
ASIN:B000NY1E8U
UPC:0013137600098
Price:$24.97
Awards:Nominated for 2 Golden Globes, Another 49 wins & 129 nominations
Genre:Art House & International
Release:2007-05-01
IMDb:0115167
Duration:124
Picture Format:Anamorphic Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:1.33:1
Sound:Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo
Languages:English
Subtitles:English, Spanish, French
Alejandro Jodorowsky  ...  (Director)
Alejandro Jodorowsky  ...  (Writer)
 
Alejandro Jodorowsky  ...  
Brontis Jodorowsky  ...  
José Legarreta  ...  
Alfonso Arau  ...  
José Luis Fernández  ...  
Ray Romano  ...  Ray Barone (210 episodes, 1996-2005)
Doris Roberts  ...  Marie Barone (210 episodes, 1996-2005)
Patricia Heaton  ...  Debra Barone (209 episodes, 1996-2005)
Brad Garrett  ...  Robert Barone (209 episodes, 1996-2005)
Peter Boyle  ...  Frank Barone (207 episodes, 1996-2005)
Madylin Sweeten  ...  Ally Barone (153 episodes, 1996-2005)
Sawyer Sweeten  ...  Geoffrey Barone (130 episodes, 1996-2005)
Sullivan Sweeten  ...  Michael Barone (130 episodes, 1996-2005)
Summary: "El Topo's" surrealism is more slapstick than Jodorwosky's brilliant follow-up, "Holy Mountain", making it more akin to a spaghetti western than a psychedelic journey through the subconscious. The director stars as the gunfighter, El Topo (The Mole), who first gives his 7-year old son (played by real life son, Brontis Jodorowsky) a glimpse of manhood in the form of weaponry, then abandons him for a horseback revenge trip focused on a heartless team of raping, pillaging bandits. Along the way, he meets Mara (Mara Lorenzio), whose tough love encourages him to become a monk. On El Topo's new quest, he encounters spiritual leaders and endures a series of personal realizations about his past violence. Absurd moments, such as when the viewer first encounters the bandits sniffing and drooling over high-heeled women's shoes out in the desert, make "El Topo" satirically wry. Brutal scenes in which rivers of blood run through towns, or people slaughter each other in firing lines, remind the viewer of Mexico's bloody history. The mixture of ironic humor and violence in "El Topo" encapsulates Jodorowky's vision of a world in which reality and the imagination are fused, yet completely separate. This paradox, of great thematic concern in all of Jodorowsky's films, is most resonant in "El Topo" when Mara and The Mole sadistically communicate with whips, guns, and knives. As "Holy Mountain's" religious message centers wholly around The Alchemist's transformation of Jesus, "El Topo" introduces love between man and woman into the symbolic mix, compensating for the divine settings and imaginative characters that elucidate the protagonist's enlightenment in the later "Holy Mountain". Only by viewing the two films as a double feature will one get the full power of Jodorowsky's Buddhist message, one of self-sacrifice and suffering towards a greater end. "--Trinie Dalton"