Death For Five Voices

Gesualdo: Death for Five Voices (German: Tod für fünf Stimmen) is a 1995 film by German director Werner Herzog filmed for ZDF television.

The film explores the music of Carlo Gesualdo and the legends surrounding Gesualdo's personality, his cursed castle, and his murder of his wife and her lover. Between narration and interviews, several of Gesualdo's madrigals are performed. Herzog calls Death for Five Voices "one of the films closest to my heart."

Gesualdo: Death for Five Voices
Directed byWerner Herzog
Written byWerner Herzog
Produced byLucki Stipetic
StarringMilva
Narrated byWerner Herzog
CinematographyPeter Zeitlinger
Edited byRainer Standke
Music byCarlo Gesualdo
Release date
1995
Running time
59 minutes
LanguageEnglish

Synopsis

The film begins in the ruins of Gesualdo's castle, where a worker is giving a tour. Several people are encountered, including a man who plays music into the cracks in the walls in order to deal with the demons which haunt the place, and a woman who claims to be the ghost of Donna Maria d'Avalos, Gesualdo's wife whom he murdered. Two cooks discuss and reconstruct an extravagant wedding feast which Gesualdo had ordered. Herzog also visits some workers from a local mental health clinic, who claim that they once treated the woman who claimed to be a ghost, and that they currently have two patients who believe themselves to be Carlo Gesualdo.

Herzog also interviews workers at the Palazzo San Severo in Naples, where Gesualdo committed the murders. A gate worker is interviewed, as well as the heir of d'Avalos, who shows Herzog the very bed in which the murders took place. Herzog then visits a nearby chapel which displays the preserved bodies of Maria d'Avalos and her lover.

These scenes are intercut with performances of Gesualdo's madrigals, as well as some historical and musical commentary by Gesualdo scholars.

Production

Much of the film was shot in the town of Gesualdo in and around the site of Carlo Gesualdo's ruined castle. Other scenes were filmed in Venosa (the composer's attributed birthplace), Cortona, Arezzo and Naples.

The film contains many scenes which are not documentary in the traditional sense. Herzog says:

"Most of the stories in the film are completely invented and staged, yet they contain the most profound possible truths about Gesualdo. I think of all my 'documentaries', Death for Five Voices is the one that really runs amok, and it is one of the films closest to my heart."

The woman claiming to be the ghost of d'Avalos was played by famous Italian actress and singer Milva. The scene of a museum curator discussing an artifact which perplexed Gesualdo was scripted by Herzog. In fact the artifact shown in the film had puzzled Herzog himself and caused him to lose sleep, yet had no connection to Gesualdo. The story of Gesualdo's murder of his son by forcing him to ride on a swing for three days while a choir sang madrigals to him was also invented for the film.

The final scene of a renaissance fair performer talking with his mother on a cell phone was also staged. Herzog instructed his brother, standing just off-camera, to call the young man and for the man to act like his mother was asking him to come home. The young man was then instructed to stare seriously into the camera, and this footage was used during the end credits. To elicit the strange stare that the man gives, Herzog instructed him to look very serious, but then played around and made various jokes right next to the camera as soon as he started filming. Herzog used a similar direction for scenes of his earlier Even Dwarfs Started Small.

References

Tags:

Death For Five Voices SynopsisDeath For Five Voices ProductionDeath For Five VoicesCarlo GesualdoGermanyTelevisionWerner HerzogZDF

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

GmailThe First Omen2020 NFL draftElon MuskArthur the KingKevin Porter Jr.M. Night ShyamalanMichael JordanCold WarUEFA Champions LeagueShaquille O'NealIndian Premier LeagueNicole Mitchell (meteorologist)Fighter (2024 film)John F. KennedyChristopher NolanList of European Cup and UEFA Champions League finalsJurassic World DominionBBC World ServiceFIFA World CupEmma StoneAnne HathawayGeorge VEminemColumbine High School massacreChatGPTGigi HadidRise of the Planet of the Apes2024 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly electionGeorge VITelegram (software)List of Billboard Hot 100 number ones of 20232021 NFL draft2026 FIFA World CupMount TakaheOpinion polling for the 2024 Indian general electionChet HolmgrenWhatsAppThe HolocaustSunny LeoneO. J. SimpsonRule 342018 NFL draftTeri Baaton Mein Aisa Uljha JiyaBitcoin protocolIona AllenSri LankaWordleThe Eras TourCleopatra2024 Croatian parliamentary electionHeart (band)Kent State shootingsThe Rookie (TV series)Dune (novel)Road House (2024 film)Anzac Day match2024 Indian general election in Uttar PradeshHybe CorporationGukesh D3 Body Problem (TV series)Pedro SánchezThe Gentlemen (2024 TV series)Aeroflot Flight 593Billie EilishSalma HayekImmaculate (2024 film)List of Stanley Cup championsCivil War (film)Fallout (American TV series)Simon CowellNapoleon2024 Indian general election in DelhiChinaOrlando BloomUnder the Bridge (TV series)🡆 More