Two soldiers discover a book chronicling the adventures of Alfonso van Worden. Alfonso’s passage through the dangerous Sierra Morena mountains is repeatedly interrupted by seemingly random encounters with an assortment of larger than life figures. As the soldiers immerse themselves in the script they become immersed in its endlessly interconnected narrative.
Wojciech Has’ adaptation of Polish novelist Jan Potocki’s magnum opus became a major countercultural favourite during the 1960s, largely due to the patronage of the Grateful Dead’s Jerry Garcia, who regarded the film’s narrative waywardness as a kind of cinematic trip. Luis Buñuel and David Lynch were also admirers, while Martin Scorsese and Francis Ford Coppolla assisted in the film’s restoration and re-release.