House of the Tiger King is a 2014 British–Swedish deconstructionist documentary released in 2004.[1] A British travel writer/explorer, Tahir Shah, and documentary filmmakers David and Leon Flamholc, join forces to go on an expedition to Peru in search of Paititi, the Inca lost city of gold.[1] Things do not go as planned, and on their first attempt, they are forced to give up due to two main setbacks: terrible conditions and troubles with their guide, American survivalist Vietnam-war veteran Richard Fowler.[1] On their second attempt, Flamholc and Shah find various locals to help them, including Eduardo Huamani Padilla.[1] Tensions begin to arise between the two, in part over the difficulties in transporting the amount of camera equipment carried by the film crew, and ultimately Shah leaves the Flamholcs stranded as he continues the journey on his own.[1] The director explains in the voiceover that he will use the best footage to put together a story once he returns home, but that "Whatever it will look like, it will never show what actually happened."[2]
House of the Tiger King | |
---|---|
Directed by | David Flamholc |
Written by | Tahir Shah |
Produced by | Leon Flamholc |
Starring | Tahir Shah Richard Fowler |
Narrated by | David Flamholc |
Cinematography | David Flamholc Leon Flamholc Jose Cuaman |
Edited by | Andrew Philip |
Music by | Joachim Cohen Kenneth Cosimo |
Release date |
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Running time | 105 minutes |
Language | English |
Budget | £70,000 |
The director's voiceover is alternated with diary notes written by Shah during the journey throughout the jungles of Peru, which indicate growing tension among the crew, depicting the hired guides as unreliable and highly dangerous.[2]
On his personal website, Shah states that "We spent seventeen weeks in deep jungle, attempting to glean information from the local tribes, and in particular from one tribal member, Pancho, who claimed to have seen a fabulous lost city in his youth, while searching for new hunting grounds. The problem was that in Pancho’s world the margin between fact and fantasy was blurred. It was never easy to know when one came to an end and the other began. The project was the hardest of my life, and made me question everything I had ever taken for granted or known. On some days I was filled with rage, and with loathing – most normally for the film crew – and on others I was consumed with depression and with angst."[3]
The film is a 105-minute[4] British/Swedish co-production, and is both directed and narrated by David Flamholc.[1] It had an estimated budget of £70,000, and was filmed on location in Peru.[4]
Critical reception
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d e f Staff. "House of the Tiger King". Archived from the original on 11 September 2012. Retrieved 7 September 2012.
- ^ a b Staff. "House of the Tiger King". Retrieved 7 September 2012.
- ^ Shah, Tahir. "House of the Tiger King (film)". Retrieved 7 September 2012.
- ^ a b Staff. "House of the Tiger King". IMDb. Retrieved 7 September 2012.