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Fando and Lis

Original title: Fando y Lis
  • 1968
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
6.5K
YOUR RATING
Fando and Lis (1968)
Watch Trailer [English SUB]
Play trailer1:22
1 Video
57 Photos
AdventureFantasy

Fando and his partially-paralyzed lover Lis search for the mythical city of Tar. Based on Jodorowsky's memories of a play by surrealist Fernando Arrabal.Fando and his partially-paralyzed lover Lis search for the mythical city of Tar. Based on Jodorowsky's memories of a play by surrealist Fernando Arrabal.Fando and his partially-paralyzed lover Lis search for the mythical city of Tar. Based on Jodorowsky's memories of a play by surrealist Fernando Arrabal.

  • Director
    • Alejandro Jodorowsky
  • Writers
    • Fernando Arrabal
    • Alejandro Jodorowsky
  • Stars
    • Tamara Garina
    • Sergio Kleiner
    • Diana Mariscal
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    6.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alejandro Jodorowsky
    • Writers
      • Fernando Arrabal
      • Alejandro Jodorowsky
    • Stars
      • Tamara Garina
      • Sergio Kleiner
      • Diana Mariscal
    • 39User reviews
    • 66Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer [English SUB]
    Trailer 1:22
    Trailer [English SUB]

    Photos57

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    Top cast44

    Edit
    Tamara Garina
    • Pope
    Sergio Kleiner
    Sergio Kleiner
    • Fando
    • (as Sergio Klainer)
    Diana Mariscal
    • Lis
    María Teresa Rivas
    • Fando's Mother
    Juan José Arreola
    • Well-Dressed Man with Book
    • (as Juan Jose Arreola)
    Rene Rebetez
    Amparo Villegas
    Amparo Villegas
    Miguel Álvarez Acosta
      Raul Romero
      Julio Castillo
      Adrián Ramos
        Henry West
        Luis Urias
        Valerie Jodorowsky
        Valerie Jodorowsky
        • Junkyard Temptress
        • (as Valerie-Jean)
        • …
        Graciela R. de Mariscal
        • Entertained Woman
        Tina French
        Fuensanta Zertuche
        • Showgirl
        • (as Fuensanta)
        Julia Marichal
        • Woman with Whip
        • Director
          • Alejandro Jodorowsky
        • Writers
          • Fernando Arrabal
          • Alejandro Jodorowsky
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews39

        6.76.5K
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        Featured reviews

        10NateManD

        An important film for surrealist film buffs everywhere.

        "Fando & Lis" is Alejandro Jodorowsky's first full length feature film. Like the 1930 film "L Age D Or", the 1967 premier at the Acapulco film festival in Mexico led to riots. The images shocked many viewers and Jodorowsky had to flee for his life. The film's story concerns Fando and his crippled girlfriend Lis. Fando is very cruel, but sometimes sympathetic. He pushes Lis around in a cart through many strange and surreal scenarios. We also witness flashbacks of Lis as a child loosing her innocents to the corruption of adults. Fando has flashbacks of his father and the soldiers which took his dad away from him. For the two main characters, it's a bizarre world gone mad. Fando & Lis are on a journey to the miraculous city of Tar. Lis is convinced she'll be healed of her physical disorder and able to walk again. This film is based on a short play by Fernado Arrabal. and at time feels like a follow up to the later filmed "Viva la Muerte". Although shot in B&W viewers are treated to many bizarre images including; a burning piano, body painting, drag queens, mud people and other assorted strangeness. "Fando & Lis" holds its place in the hall of fame of weird films. You must see it to believe it.
        migcoyula

        Inspiring

        Fando and Lis depart in search of the magic City of Tar, which will probably offer a cure to Lis' legs in order to make her walk again, aside from granting eternal happiness to both of them. The Search: An early thematic goal to the director's later midnight classics El Topo and The Holy Mountain. Scandalous, and too sacrilegious for the audience at the Acapulco Film Festival, the film was subsequently dropped by the distributor in 1968. Fando and Lis remained obscure for over 30 years.

        Alejandro Jodorowsky's long-lost feature debut film is uneven, but it's obvious that a raw energy and a torrent of imaginative ideas went into the making. Shot on weekends with a minuscule budget, casting friends and family, Fando and Lis plays like a cross of the later Fellini circus with the brutality of an early Buñuel film.

        Structured as a road movie of sorts, our protagonists have bizarre encounters with an array of unpredictable characters. Many would call it violent, but there is a certain childlike quality in the staging: A burning piano is knocked over again and again in reverse motion; Mud bathers rise (a la Night of The Living Dead) at the base of a mountain; A knife perforates a little doll's crotch, and snakes are introduced in the crack. I could go on describing the stream of images that stuck with me, but you get the point: Watch the movie.

        Trying to explain its meaning is beyond the point, as Jodorowsky himself stated: "I'm more attracted to what I don't understand." The symbolism ranges from light social satire to striking, brutal imagery. Same goes for the B&W cinematography, which alternates from bland hand-held "backyard style" to breathtakingly executed shots (see the wonderfully choreographed spiral movement when Fando abandons Lis in a pit, running up the hill in circles in the background while Lis laments in the foreground).

        Yet Jodorowsky seems more invested at times in the power of his ideas than in their proper screen execution. The action is sometimes clunky and/or hampered by questionable editing choices. This inconsistency doesn't seem like a deliberate effect, since many sequences are conventionally but effectively cut. However, the use of music is quite expressive as well as many sound design choices.

        Fando and Lis is not a perfect film, but "perfection" is an absurd term given the nature of the material. In any case, suffice to say that this feature debut resonates far more deeply than the sober, functional exercises that Hollywood chunks out every year, not to mention the "art-house mainstream" that permeates most of the Cannes Film Festival highlights of late.

        Jodorowsky's work is often closer to performance art than it is to film, if we take film as an expression of consistent atmosphere and cinematic flow, illustrating ideas at the fully extent of the medium. The auteur expresses that as a filmmaker; he doesn't care whether the audience is bored or angry, he says a film should be made with your guts, without following any rules of cinematic grammar. The result is sometimes inconsistent but never disappointing.

        In a world plagued by artistic concessions, Jodorowsky emerges as an artist with an unique voice, capable of delivering unforgettable images. His work is always refreshing and inspiring.
        7Witchfinder-General-666

        "The Tree Sought Refuge in the Leaf." - Jodorowsky's Fascinating Feature-Length Debut

        The bizarre films of counterculture icon Alejandro Jodorowsky are, without any doubt, some of the most unique cinematic experiences one can have, and, in my humble opinion, also some of the greatest. Eleven years after debuting with the great, but relatively harmless short "La Cravate" (aka. "The Transposed Heads") of 1957, Jodorowsky made his feature length debut in 1968 with this incredibly surreal, fascinating and often disturbing gem called "Fando y Lis". It is never possible to fully understand a Jodorowsky film and its 'meaning' by 100 per cent, even after multiple viewings. Even so (or therefore), there is nothing more fascinating than the cinematic World of Jodorowsky.

        The adaptation of a play by Fernando Arrabal, with whom Jodorowsky had worked on stage before, "Fando y Lis" is just as surreal as the master's more famous films to follow, "El Topo" and "The Holy Mountain". This is also doubtlessly Jodorowsky's most pessimistic film and, at the time of its release, it was scandalous due to its disturbing, uncompromising and bizarre nature. When it premiered in Mexico, "Fando y Lis" caused such outrage that riots broke out, and Jodorowsky had to escape the theater secretly in order to avoid getting seriously hurt or even lynched by protesters. The film was subsequently banned by the Mexican government.

        The film, which is divided into four acts, follows Fando (Sergio Kleiner) and his crippled girlfriend Lis (Diana Mariscal), who drift through post-apocalyptic wasteland in search of a mythical city named Tar. In search for Tar, a sort of paradise that has survived a 'final war' that has left the world in ruins, Fando y Lis encounter a variety of bizarre people and situations. On their journey, which is always surreal, and gradually gets disturbing, Fando becomes more and more abusive towards his innocent, helpless girlfriend... This is only a very vague description of the film, however it is hardly possible to give a proper one. As Jodorowsky' other films, "Fando y Lis" simply is a film that has to be seen. It is no wonder that this was highly controversial when it came out, and it is still disturbing today. Scenes which broach the issue of child abuse were arguably the most controversial ones, but the film includes all other sorts of controversial topics, including violence in relationships, humiliation and exploitation of the poor, cross-dressing, incest, etc., as well as the Jodorowsky-typical religious/iconoclastic symbolism. These were, of course, explosive issues for narrow-minded so-called 'moralists' at the time, and it is therefor no wonder that the film was controversial. Jodorowsky also gives his personal, very bizarre vision of the living dead in this film, which was released shortly before G.A. Romero's milestone "Night of the Living Dead". The film is often disturbing, yet is fascinating on so many other levels, sometimes beautiful and even funny, and always very, very weird (in an ingenious manner).

        I cannot claim that this is a proper description of "Fando y Lis", but, as said, there is probably no such thing as a proper description of a Jodorowsky film. Jodorowsky's films are probably not accessible to everybody, and to many "Fando Y Lis" is probably even his least accessible film. This is maybe the Jodorowsky film, which is most strictly a film for Jodorowsky-fans. It may not quite as continuously overwhelming as his masterpieces "El Topo" (1970), "The Holy Mountain" (1973) and "Santa Sangre" (1989), but it certainly is a fascinating experience that is unique and awe-inspiring. To those unfamiliar with Jodorowsky's cinema, I recommend to begin your journey into this great man's cinematic world with "El Topo" or "The Holy Mountain", or even with "Santa Sangre", which is probably his most accessible film to lovers of a more conventional kind of cinema. Those who loved the previously mentioned films should definitely see this one. To lovers of surreal art-house cinema, and to my fellow Jodorowsky-fans in particular, "Fando y Lis" is an absolute must see!
        7jimeneznitay

        Very interesting

        This is the first film of this type that I've seen, and I have mixed emotions about it. I have to say that this film is very tedious to watch, and you have to be open minded, and not expecting nothing normal. Watching it from the surface is easy to say it has no sense or narrative at all, but if you pay some attention you'll be able to at least figure out the relation between scenes and basic concepts, such as love, death and fear. This is a very abstract film and I don't think I got all the hidden messages, but the ones I interpreted, left me with a rewarding feeling. If you're looking for something different and unique in film, this is something you'll find interesting, but be patient though, because the movie is slow
        8forecastmazy

        Excellent art-film

        The film itself barely has any narrative and many of the film's mysteries will not be revealed until the viewer watches the commentary by the director (referring to the DVD version). Nevertheless, the film is an excellent example of the abstract art cinema. Everything in the film is a symbol, the film plays itself out in symbols and imagery, it is an example of a pure attempt to tell a story without holding the audiences hand in any way. This is international art cinema at it's best, and of course I understand that not everyone will enjoy this film, fortunately this genre does not require the audience to follow along. If you put your heart into watching the film and later watch the commentary to wash away the confusion, I promise, you'll be happy you did so.

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        Storyline

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        Did you know

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        • Trivia
          When the film premiered at the 1968 Acapulco Film Festival, the first screening erupted into a riot. Director Alejandro Jodorowsky had to leave the theatre by sneaking outside to a waiting limousine. When the crowd outside the theatre recognized him, the car was pelted with rocks. The following week, the film opened to sell-out crowds in Mexico City, but fights broke out in the audiences and the film was banned by the Mexican government. Jodorowsky himself was nearly deported and the scandal provided a lot of fodder for the Mexican newspapers.
        • Quotes

          Fando's Father: Let's play. Okay, I'm a famous pianist.

          Young Fando: If you're a famous pianist, and I cut off your arm... then what will you do?

          Fando's Father: I'll become a famous painter.

          Young Fando: And if I cut off the other one, what will you do?

          Fando's Father: I'll become a famous dancer.

          Young Fando: And if I cut off your legs, then what?

          Fando's Father: Then I'll become a famous singer.

          Young Fando: And if I cut off your head, then what?

          Fando's Father: Once dead, my skin will become a beautiful drum.

          Young Fando: What if I burn the drum?

          Fando's Father: I will become a cloud and take on any shape.

          Young Fando: And if the cloud dissolves, what then?

          Fando's Father: I will become rain and produce a harvest of wars!

          Young Fando: You win. I'm going to miss you when you're gone.

          Fando's Father: If you ever feel too lonely... search for the magical city of Tar.

        • Alternate versions
          Shortly after Federico Fellini's Satyricon (1969) was released to appreciative audiences in the USA, an English dubbed version was hurriedly released that was re-edited to appear more "Felliniesque" and was 13 minutes shorter than the original edit. It was a critical and financial flop.
        • Connections
          Featured in La constellation Jodorowsky (1994)

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        FAQ16

        • How long is Fando and Lis?Powered by Alexa

        Details

        Edit
        • Release date
          • June 8, 1972 (Mexico)
        • Country of origin
          • Mexico
        • Language
          • Spanish
        • Also known as
          • Tar Babies
        • Filming locations
          • Mexico
        • Production company
          • Producciones Panicas
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Box office

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        • Budget
          • $100,000 (estimated)
        • Gross worldwide
          • $1,897
        See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

        Tech specs

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        • Runtime
          • 1h 33m(93 min)
        • Color
          • Black and White
        • Sound mix
          • Mono
        • Aspect ratio
          • 1.37 : 1

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