El Topo

 

El Topo (1970)

NEUTRAL
Various
Movie Reviews80%
NR
1971, Western, 2h 3m
RT Critics’ Score: 80% (UNBIASED)
RT Audience Score:
Awards & Nominations: 4 wins & 3 nominations

 

Critics Consensus

By turns intoxicating and confounding, El Topo contains the creative multitudes that made writer-director Alejandro Jodorowsky such a singular talent
 

Audience Consensus

El Topo is a wild ride that will leave you questioning everything you just watched. It’s like a fever dream mixed with a trippy art exhibit and a spaghetti western. The visuals are stunning and the violence is over-the-top, but somehow it all works together to create a truly unique cinematic experience. It’s not for everyone, but if you’re in the mood for something weird and wonderful, give El Topo a try. Just be prepared to have your mind blown.
 
Movie Trailer

Movie Info

Storyline

El Topo decides to confront warrior masters on a transformative desert journey he begins with his six-year-old son, who must bury his childhood totems to become a man. El Topo (the mole) claims to be God, while dressed as a gun-slinger in black, riding a horse through a mystical landscape strewn with American Western and ancient Eastern religious symbols. Bandits slaughtered a village on his path, so El Topo avenges the massacred, then forcibly takes their leader’s woman Mara as his. El Topo’s surreal way is bloody, sexual and self-reflective, musing of his own demons, as he tries to vanquish those he encounters.

 
Production Company(ies)
Dreamworks Pictures, Pacific Data Images Dream Works Animation,
 
Distributor
Douglas Films
 
Release Type

 
Filming Location(s)
Cañón de la Huasteca, Santa Catarina, Nuevo León, Mexico
 
MPAA / Certificate
Not Rated
 
Year of Release
1971
 

Technical Specs
  • Color:
    Color
  • Sound mix:
    Dolby
  • Aspect ratio:
    1.33 : 11.37 : 1
  • Runtime:
    2h 3m
  • Language(s):
    Spanish
  • Country of origin:
    United States
  • Release date:
    Release Date (Theaters): Dec 18, 1970 Original
    Release Date (Streaming): May 1, 2007

 
Genre(s)
Western
 
Keyword(s)
starring Alejandro Jodorowsky, Mara Lorenzio, Jacqueline Luis, Brontis Jodorowsky, José Legarreta, Alfonso Arau, directed by Alejandro Jodorowsky, written by Alejandro Jodorowsky, Western, box office performance, budget, reviewed by Ed Potton, Peter Bradshaw, Ben Walters, Jay Cocks, Nick Schager, David Parkinson, Rob Aldam, Ángel S Harguindey, Indra Arriaga, Christopher Hudson, Cole Smithey, Donald J Levit, MPAA rating, Douglas Films, Old West, Sodom and Gomorrah, gunslinger, redemption, violence, surrealism, religious references, mistical, symbols, unique, evocative atmosphere, narrative structure, cult cinema, forgotten classic, raw energy, fluid direction, unprecedented, memorable scenes, obscured
 

Box Office Details

Worldwide gross: $160,468
Worldwide gross (inflation-adjusted): $1,316,751
Worldwide gross ranking (inflation-adjusted): 2,525
Worldwide tickets sold (est.): 143,593
 
US/Canada gross: $80,302
US/Canada gross (inflation-adjusted): $658,933
US/Canada gross ranking (inflation-adjusted): 2,270
US/Canada opening weekend: $6,857
US/Canada opening weekend (inflation-adjusted): $56,266
US/Canada opening weekend ranking (inflation-adjusted): 2,157
 
Budget and Earnings Details
Production budget (est.): $1,000,000
Production budget (inflation-adjusted): $8,205,690
Production budget ranking: 1,742
Marketing and distribution budget (inflation-adjusted est.): $4,418,764
Box office net earnings to date (inflation-adjusted est.): -$11,307,703
ROI to date (est.): -90%
ROI ranking: 1,958

 
Movie Cast & Crew

Cast & Crew

Alejandro JodorowskyMara LorenzioJacqueline LuisBrontis JodorowskyJosé Legarreta
Alejandro Jodorowsky
Mara Lorenzio
Jacqueline Luis
Brontis Jodorowsky
José Legarreta
El Topo
La mujer
Mujercita
Hijo
Moribundo
Alejandro Jodorowsky – El Topo
Mara Lorenzio – La mujer
Jacqueline Luis – Mujercita
Brontis Jodorowsky – Hijo
José Legarreta – Moribundo
Alfonso Arau – Bandido 1

 

Alejandro JodorowskyAlejandro JodorowskyNA
Alejandro Jodorowsky
Alejandro Jodorowsky
NA
Director
Writer
Producer
Producer
Producer

Director(s)
Alejandro Jodorowsky
 
Writer(s)
Alejandro Jodorowsky
 
Producer(s)
NA

 
Movie Reviews & Awards
Film Festivals

 
Awards & Nominations
4 wins & 3 nominations
 
Academy Awards

 

Top Reviews
Ed PottonPeter BradshawBen WaltersJay CocksNick Schager
Ed Potton
Peter Bradshaw
Ben Walters
Jay Cocks
Nick Schager
Times
Guardian
Time Out
TIME Magazine
Lessons of Darkness
EL TOPO
 All Critics (44) | Top Critics (17) | Fresh (35) | Rotten (9)
 It’s tempting to say they don’t make films like this any more, but I’m not sure anyone has ever made them like Jodorowsky.
 
 January 10, 2020 | Rating: 4/5
 
 Ed Potton
 Times (UK)
 TOP CRITIC
 It’s a bizarre head-trip festival of occult psychedelia, heatstroke visuals, Age-of-Aquarius nude dancing and violence through poster-paint fake blood splattered about the place.
 
 January 9, 2020 | Rating: 4/5
 
 Peter Bradshaw
 Guardian
 TOP CRITIC
 It remains an aesthetically intoxicating trip.
 
 March 11, 2015
 
 Ben Walters
 Time Out
 TOP CRITIC
 The film is by turns comic and profound, hysterical and pompous, fully complex enough to deserve more than a simple yea or nay.
 
 November 15, 2013
 
 Jay Cocks
 TIME Magazine
 TOP CRITIC
 Has lost little of the maddening, bewildering weirdness that made it a seminal midnight-movie phenomenon.
 
 June 5, 2011 | Rating: B
 
 Nick Schager
 Lessons of Darkness
 TOP CRITIC
 Violent, visionary, vital.
 
 May 2, 2007 | Rating: 4/5
 
 David Parkinson
 Empire Magazine
 TOP CRITIC
 A true one-off
 
 July 29, 2021
 
 Rob Aldam
 Backseat Mafia
 […] splendid cinematography, astonishing production design and an incredibly human story. [Full review in Spanish]
 
 August 29, 2017
 
 Ángel S. Harguindey
 El Pais (Spain)
 The element of violence… holds the kernels for inexhaustible analysis of the human condition that preceded the film, through the time the film captivated audiences, and even today.
 
 June 20, 2017
 
 Indra Arriaga
 Anchorage Press
 Forget about the cosmic significance: it is the work of a talented film-maker, and full of memorable scenes.
 
 March 11, 2015
 
 Christopher Hudson
 The Spectator
 [VIDEO ESSAY] For all of its easily mocked elements, “El Topo” is a work of mad cinematic genius that sticks.
 
 December 4, 2011 | Rating: A-
 
 Cole Smithey
 ColeSmithey.com
 … the story of ‘El Topo’ proves too scattered and weak to bear its digressions and vague symbols that suggest everything, anything and nothing.
 
 November 20, 2011
 
 Donald J. Levit
 ReelTalk Movie Reviews…

 
Movie Plot & More
Plot
El Topo decides to confront warrior masters on a transformative desert journey he begins with his six-year-old son, who must bury his childhood totems to become a man. El Topo (the mole) claims to be God, while dressed as a gun-slinger in black, riding a horse through a mystical landscape strewn with American Western and ancient Eastern religious symbols. Bandits slaughtered a village on his path, so El Topo avenges the massacred, then forcibly takes their leader’s woman Mara as his. El Topo’s surreal way is bloody, sexual and self-reflective, musing of his own demons, as he tries to vanquish those he encounters.
 
Trivia

 
Goofs / Tidbits
There is no goofy or funny or odd comment about the film El Topo on Fresh Kernels.
 
Movie Links Wikipedia and Rotten Tomatoes

Links
Wikipedia: Go to Wiki
Rotten Tomatoes: Go to RT

 
Where to Watch

Where to Watch

 
Move the ScoreAlejandro-Jodorowsky.jpg

Movies, Streaming