Buy new:
Save with Used - Very Good
Image Unavailable
Color:
-
-
-
- Sorry, this item is not available in
- Image not available
- To view this video download Flash Player
El Topo
Return this item for free
We offer easy, convenient returns with at least one free return option: no shipping charges. All returns must comply with our returns policy.
Learn more about free returns.- Go to your orders and start the return
- Select your preferred free shipping option
- Drop off and leave!
Return this item for free
We offer easy, convenient returns with at least one free return option: no shipping charges. All returns must comply with our returns policy.
Learn more about free returns.- Go to your orders and start the return
- Select your preferred free shipping option
- Drop off and leave!
Additional DVD options | Edition | Discs | Price | New from | Used from |
DVD
April 16, 2021 "Please retry" | — | 2 | $13.52 | $18.88 |
DVD
July 1, 2014 "Please retry" | — | 1 | $8.47 | $7.52 |
DVD
February 26, 2008 "Please retry" | — | 1 | $51.20 | $54.65 |
Watch Instantly with ![]() | Rent | Buy |
El Topo | — | — |
Purchase options and add-ons
Genre | Action & Adventure |
Format | Color, NTSC, Multiple Formats |
Contributor | Alfonso Arau, José Legarreta, Gerardo Zepeda, Alf Junco, Federico Gonzáles, René Barrera, René Alís, José Luis Fernández, Alejandro Jodorowsky, Brontis Jodorowsky, Vicente Lara See more |
Language | English, Spanish |
Runtime | 2 hours and 5 minutes |
Frequently bought together

Customers who bought this item also bought
Product Description
Product Description
It was the landmark cult film that began the whole Midnight Movie phenomena of the counterculture crazy 1970s. EL TOPO was the most talked about, most controversial quasi-Western head trip ever made, transforming the way risk-taking audiences, seeking mainstream Hollywood alternatives, watched edgy underground films. Classic Americana and avant-garde European cinema sensibilities meet Zen Buddhism and the Bible as master gunfighter and cosmic mystic El Topo (played by writer/director Alejandro Jodorowsky) must defeat his four sharp-shooting rivals on an ever- increasingly bizarre path to allegorical self- enlightenment and surreal resurrection. -Alan Jones
Amazon.com
El Topo's surrealism is more slapstick than Jodorwosky's brilliant follow-up, Holy Mountain, making it more akin to a spaghetti western than a psychedelic journey through the subconscious. The director stars as the gunfighter, El Topo (The Mole), who first gives his 7-year old son (played by real life son, Brontis Jodorowsky) a glimpse of manhood in the form of weaponry, then abandons him for a horseback revenge trip focused on a heartless team of raping, pillaging bandits. Along the way, he meets Mara (Mara Lorenzio), whose tough love encourages him to become a monk. On El Topo's new quest, he encounters spiritual leaders and endures a series of personal realizations about his past violence. Absurd moments, such as when the viewer first encounters the bandits sniffing and drooling over high-heeled women's shoes out in the desert, make El Topo satirically wry. Brutal scenes in which rivers of blood run through towns, or people slaughter each other in firing lines, remind the viewer of Mexico's bloody history. The mixture of ironic humor and violence in El Topo encapsulates Jodorowky's vision of a world in which reality and the imagination are fused, yet completely separate. This paradox, of great thematic concern in all of Jodorowsky's films, is most resonant in El Topo when Mara and The Mole sadistically communicate with whips, guns, and knives. As Holy Mountain's religious message centers wholly around The Alchemist's transformation of Jesus, El Topo introduces love between man and woman into the symbolic mix, compensating for the divine settings and imaginative characters that elucidate the protagonist's enlightenment in the later Holy Mountain. Only by viewing the two films as a double feature will one get the full power of Jodorowsky's Buddhist message, one of self-sacrifice and suffering towards a greater end. --Trinie Dalton
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 1.33:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : Unrated (Not Rated)
- Product Dimensions : 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 2.88 ounces
- Director : Alejandro Jodorowsky
- Media Format : Color, NTSC, Multiple Formats
- Run time : 2 hours and 5 minutes
- Actors : Alejandro Jodorowsky, Brontis Jodorowsky, José Legarreta, Alfonso Arau, José Luis Fernández
- Subtitles: : English, Spanish, Portuguese Brazilian, French
- Language : English (Dolby Digital 5.1)
- Studio : ABKCO / Anchor Bay
- ASIN : B000NY1E8U
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: #52,052 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #5,187 in Action & Adventure DVDs
- #8,530 in Drama DVDs
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers consider this movie a brilliant classic, praising its beautiful cinematography with brilliant colors and camerawork, as well as its spiritual symbolism and symbolic nature. The performance receives positive feedback, and customers find it worth the price. The storyline and pacing receive mixed reactions, with customers describing it as strange and difficult to understand. The violence level is also mixed, with some finding it grotesquely violent.
AI Generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers praise this film as a brilliant classic and one of Jodorovsky's best works.
"...IMHO, its one of the most brilliant movies ever made...." Read more
"Cool movie for a headtrip...." Read more
"...This is not a cookie cutter film, but if you commit to it you may never be the same...." Read more
"...Worth watching even though it’s not English. Could easily see myself watching it once a year." Read more
Customers praise the movie's visual quality, noting its beautiful cinematography and brilliant use of colors and camerawork.
"...As for the release itself, I must say, it looks absolutely gorgeous on Blu-Ray, it's hard to tell that it was forty three years ago...." Read more
"...Like in each of his films to follow, Jodorowsky creates a surreal cinematic landscape that is not unlike the works of Salvador Dali...." Read more
"...It has that true and pure vision of what we would call now as an "Independent Film." El Topo is an allegory of a spiritual quest for..." Read more
"...a messed up movie that you mainly just need to watch for its visual brilliance, symbolism and extremely stylish choreography...." Read more
Customers appreciate the movie's spiritual elements, noting its heavy use of symbolism and metaphor.
"...In fact, I've seen it many times as there is so much symbolism in this movie, simultaneous symbolism, that it is a very difficult film to grasp in..." Read more
"...you wonder what exactly it all means, but there is an underlying message in the madness. Check it out!" Read more
"...movie that you mainly just need to watch for its visual brilliance, symbolism and extremely stylish choreography...." Read more
"...This film, I feel lends itself more to a variety of interpretations, and so that's why I'd call it post-modernist...." Read more
Customers find the movie worth the price, with one mentioning that the special effects alone justify the purchase.
"...He had no source material and no crazy budget...." Read more
"...It's the wild cool way they made this film. The special effects alone are worth the purchase. As they are not top notch effects...." Read more
"...the price in coin, but the price of feeling dirtied and used and cheapened?..." Read more
"...Not really my "cup a tea", though worth a watch. One." Read more
Customers praise the movie's performance, with one describing it as a monumental achievement.
"...realizes that these people, besides being very holy, are both extremely powerful and smart....far more powerful and smart than he is...." Read more
"...I would rank this as Jodorowsky's second best work, with The Holy Mountain at the top...." Read more
"...Quite simply: do not miss this monumental achievement, it should be next on your list, period. It's about as good as a film can possibly get...." Read more
"Plays well but hated the movie" Read more
Customers have mixed reactions to the movie's storyline, describing it as strange and complex, though one customer finds it completely relatable.
"...These are the finest, holiest people on earth. They are masters of life, each having mastered a certain aspect of how life should be lived...." Read more
"...such as John Lennon and Dennis Hopper, EL TOPO is an important piece of world cinema from one of Mexico's most profound directors...." Read more
"Definitely a midnight showing movie. So strange that you have to watch it. I wanted this for my collection due to the weirdness of it." Read more
"This is the movie that changed the world...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the movie's violence level, with some finding it grotesquely violent, while one customer describes it as offensive in every way imaginable.
"The beginning of this amazing film is quite disturbing, but as I stayed with it, its profound message of spiritual awakening gradually became more..." Read more
"...saw this film back in the 70's I thought it was one of the most unusual violent films I have ever seen with one of the most unusual visuals provided..." Read more
"...Even though a little gory for some the, film is still a masterpiece." Read more
"The depictions of animal cruelty in this film (whether actually real or staged) are disgusting and deplorable, and certainly distract and take away..." Read more
Customers find the pacing of the movie difficult to follow, with several describing it as downright stupid.
"...in this movie, simultaneous symbolism, that it is a very difficult film to grasp in one viewing...." Read more
"...is it because it is tediously long, doltishly acted, cheaply dubbed, pathetically made up, clownishly costumed, tinnily recorded, hamfistedly edited..." Read more
"...It looked low budget, badly scripted, not cohesive or difficult to understand, for example, the reason to travel with a completely naked boy..." Read more
"...It's an intense and demanding experience that you should approach with an open state of mind and loads of patience...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews. Please reload the page.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 28, 2012I first saw this movie at the Elgin Cinema in NYC, directly after its run at the Museum of Modern Art. In fact, I've seen it many times as there is so much symbolism in this movie, simultaneous symbolism, that it is a very difficult film to grasp in one viewing. As you've heard, it took over 30 years to be released on video because of a dispute. And as you can also see, some love it, some hate, and others have no idea what its about. IMHO, its one of the most brilliant movies ever made. I would characterize it most simply as an "eastern western," that is, a western with strong eastern philosophical leanings.
If you haven't seen it, see it. At least then you can join the controversy.
If you have seen it and haven't a clue what its about, I'll attempt to summarize it for you below.
(SPOILER ALERT)
The story concerns a man, who is known by the name of El Topo (the mole). He is called the mole because he is like that animal. That is, a mole is an animal that spends most of its life underground, in darkness, searching for the light (wisdom). However, should it find the light of day, it is blinded by the sun. Similarly, this person spends his life in spiritual darkness in a search for true enlightenment. But when he achieves his ultimate goal, it is far too painful to deal with.
El Topo is a western style cowboy who tries to be a good man - helping people, righting wrongs. Think the Lone Ranger. When he sees wrong, he uses his guns to provide justice.
The movie opens with him assisting his son in the passage towards adulthood. His son is naked to symbolize his purity and honesty.
Traveling, they encounter a mass murder. El Topo is determined to avenge this crime. He is successful in this effort but after defeating the murderers, Mara, a woman who worked for them asks if El Topo can take her with him. He agrees. Howwever, in time, she works to manipulate and control him. While he sees this happening, her sexuality is too overpowering for him to resist.
She wants him to abandon his son, to leave him with some priests and to travel with her alone. He agrees, knowing that what he is about to do is wrong. He asks his son for forgiveness. The son becomes dressed in the robes of the priests.
While El Topo enjoys relaxing with Mara, she is not content. She makes demands. She wants him to display his power, to become the most powerful person on earth, or she will leave him. She explains that there are several masters who live out in the desert. Only after he has defeated them all will he be the best. Only after that will she love him.
Reluctantly, to ensure her love, he confronts each of these masters. However, these are not criminals. These are the finest, holiest people on earth. They are masters of life, each having mastered a certain aspect of how life should be lived. Each master that he meets is at a higher level of spirituality than the previous master. Each succeeding master that he meets has fewer and fewer possessions. The final has only a loin cloth and a butterfly net. El Topo realizes that it is wrong to challenge and attempt to defeat/destroy these holy people, but he must do this to make Mara happy and keep her love. He also realizes that these people, besides being very holy, are both extremely powerful and smart....far more powerful and smart than he is. Therefore, the only possible way that he can defeat them is by using deception, trickery. The masters are each incredibly good and honest people. In the end, Topo kills them all, through trickery. But when you win through trickery, have you really won? In attempting to kill the final master, who is dressed in a loin cloth and carries a butterfly net, El Topo takes out his gun. The final master, laughing, waves his butterfly net menacingly. When El Topo shoots at the master, the master uses his net to return the bullet into the sand. "Come, try to shoot me again," says the Master. "The next bullet that you fire I will return to your heart." El Topo throws down his gun, crying. He realizes that he has been defeated. The master attempts to comfort him. "Why are you crying?" he says, "I have nothing that you could have taken from me." "I could have taken your life," says El Topo, weeping. "My life?" laughs the final master, "My life is unimportant. Here, give me your gun. I will show you." El Topo gives the final master his gun. The master takes the gun and shoots himself in the mouth. As he lies dying, he whispers to El Topo, "You lose." The final master is dead.
El Topo's goal had been to win back Mara's love by defeating the masters. However, achieving this goal does not bring the happiness he was seeking. The actions he has taken now tear at his soul. Also, Mara is no longer interested in El Topo. She takes up with another young, attractive woman gunslinger, dressed in black, just as El Topo. She speaks in a deep male voice. Mara has no further need of him. She takes his gun and shoots him, then rides off with the woman in black.
El Topo's wounded body is carried away by the local leper colony. They bring him to their cave to heal him. His hair turns all white. He is being purified, cleansed. Finally, he is reborn through loving care and magic. He is appreciative and is determined now to dedicate himself to helping these people. He shaves his head. He wears plain brown, simple clothes. He will not carry a gun ever again. The lepers have been banished by the townspeople and are forced to live in a dark cave far from the city. (as a mole would) They want to be allowed back into society, into the world. El Topo will assist them in their efforts at freedom. However, the lepers are very unwelcome by the townspeople, who are incredibly selfish, evil people. El Topo decides that he will meet with the townspeople, work for them in order to earn money for both himself and the lepers and to make friends with them, so that his friends, the lepers, will be able to become full fledged members of the town. With the money that he makes, he buys equipment to assist him in digging a hole from their underground leper colony to the surface, and freedom.
El Topo marries one of the leper ladies who has been the kindest to him since his arrival. They go into town to be married by the local priest. El Topo recognizes the priest as his son, now grown up. His son recognizes his father and is enraged at El Topo for abandoning him. He begins beating him with his fists. El Topo does not fight back. He is bloodied and on the ground. The woman pleads with the priest to stop his attack. She explains that El Topo has changed...that he is a very good man now, doing good work....trying to assist the lepers in obtaining their freedom. The son listens and finally agrees to the following - he will permit his father to complete his work in helping the lepers. However, after his work is complete, he will kill him. In the meantime, he agrees to marry his father and this woman.
El Topo completes the opening to the cave. The lepers now have their tunnel to freedom, their tunnel to what they see as enlightenment, their tunnel to the light of day.
When he finishes the digging, the son says that he will now kill his father. El Topo stands straight, prepared to die. But the son begins crying. "I cannot kill my master," he says. He throws down his gun.
El Topo realizes that his next goal is to prepare the town for the lepers, to gain their acceptance. He must go to town and talk with them. When they are ready to accept the lepers, he will tell them to enter the town. But the lepers are not in a patient mood. They can no longer wait to see the light of day. They want to come into the light now. The minute they realize that the path to the surface has been completed, they run out of the cave, and walk towards the town. They intend to become citizens of the town. That is their goal. That will be their ultimate happiness.
But El Topo knows that the townspeople aren't yet ready to receive these people. If they go into town now, the townspeople will destroy them. When he learns that they have journeyed to town, he runs there as fast as he can. When he arrives, he sees that he is too late. The townspeople, using their guns, have killed all of the lepers.
El Topo falls on the ground, crying loudly. He is devastated. He is filled with rage at the townspeople for what they have done. He walks towards them. They all shoot at him but the bullets bounce off. He takes a gun from one of the townspeople and begins shooting at them. Eventually, he kills them all.
After they are all dead, he sits on the ground in a lotus position. He pours oil from an oil lamp all over himself. He then sets himself on fire. He will immolate himself in protest for what has taken place here. He hopes that this action will make the world a better place. After a few minutes, all that is left of El Topo is a skeleton. Then, even the skeleton has been consumed. When the fire finally goes out, we see that his body has been transformed not to dust but to pure honey...with all of the bees of the world gathering there......
Brontis, his son, has now changed his garb from priest to gunslinger. He is now dressed all in black, just like his father was. He walks with El Topo's wife and young son. They get on a black horse, just as El Topo rode on, and move on to the next town. We see now that the son must follow the same path as the father. For such is life. It continues in a circle, and must be self-taught.
My favorite line from the movie is "Too much perfection is a mistake."
- Reviewed in the United States on April 20, 2025Definitely a midnight showing movie. So strange that you have to watch it. I wanted this for my collection due to the weirdness of it.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 9, 2013I first heard of Alejandro Jodorowsky after I read the book the "Dune" by Frank Herbert and saw the eventual film adaptation made by master surrealist filmmaker David Lynch. From watching that movie, I learned that some time before Lynch's adaptation was made, another filmmaker by the name of Alejandro Jodorowsky was set to adapt Herbert's story to film. Interested, I looked into the films of this Jodorowsky fellow and found out about "El Topo," which was described as being like a "Spaghetti Western." Already being an aficionado of the Spaghetti Western genre, I looked into "El Topo" to discover it's not in fact a 'true' Spaghetti Western, but what they call an "Acid Western," which is a movie with Old West themes keeping the excesses and absurdities that is typical of a Spaghetti Western.
That said, "El Topo" is a film unlike anything you've ever seen. It tells the tale of a wandering gunslinger who over the course of the first half of the movie fights four 'masters' and then finds himself in a cave of deformed people in the second act, where he becomes a monk who must help them make a tunnel from their cave to the adjacent town, which is full of religious nuts and sex fiends. That's all I really need to say about the movie, if you want to see it, you either will or won't. As for the release itself, I must say, it looks absolutely gorgeous on Blu-Ray, it's hard to tell that it was forty three years ago. The use of colors and camerawork are brilliant, the acting is over the top, but in a good way. It's a film filled with absurd images and acts that make you wonder what exactly it all means, but there is an underlying message in the madness. Check it out!
- Reviewed in the United States on February 4, 2013The road to enlightenment is paved in blood in EL TOPO, the feature film that brought Alejandro Jodorowsky to the public for the first time and single-handedly started the "midnight movie" craze! In it, a mystical gunslinger enters the desert to confront the Four Masters, warriors of legend who hold the keys to personal enlightenment. After defeating each of them, he is betrayed by his followers and left to die in a small desert town. Years later, El Topo awakens as the prophet and savior to a group of misshapen inbreeds who have become trapped in a perilous cavern. He then begins a noble quest to tunnel his people out, not knowing that the outer world is not ready to accept them. EL TOPO is a postmodern religious allegory set in an ultra-violent Western setting that is sure to blow your mind! Jodorowsky stars as the mysterious lead, a chauvinistic New Age messiah clad in black that progresses through each new stage of personal understanding through the barrel of a gun. Like in each of his films to follow, Jodorowsky creates a surreal cinematic landscape that is not unlike the works of Salvador Dali. His symbolism and cynical humor can often be difficult to deconstruct, but they amount to a viewing experience unlike any other. Hailed by leaders in the counterculture movement such as John Lennon and Dennis Hopper, EL TOPO is an important piece of world cinema from one of Mexico's most profound directors.
-Carl Manes
I Like Horror Movies
Top reviews from other countries
- Mr. James M. BartonReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 26, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Wetern Mind Trip
I've watched it a few times, the plot twists and turns from weird to weirder all the time staying coherent (if your tripping or insane (I'd say I'm insane enough to just about follow it)).
Don't bother trying to explain the film to anyone it's something to be experiences, rather like some bizarre western dream quests and story of spiritual transformation.
There's lots of religious undertones to the imagery and I think it's one of those films to keep coming back too.
If your into personal development in a spiritual sense there's a whole set of other levels that can be taken from this film
-
sudo3Reviewed in Japan on September 8, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars さらに鮮明に
エル・トポ HDリマスター版 [DVD]の買い替えで購入しました。
作品の内容については今更と言うか、あまり知った風な事は言いづらい作品なので商品自体のレビューを書かせて頂きます。
専門知識は無いのでザックリとした内容になります。
ディスクはピクチャーレーベル仕様。ジャケットと同じイラストです。
DVDリマスター版ではリバーシブルジャケットでしたが今回は採用されず。
代わりに裏面にはチャプター項とモノクロのイラストがあり、ケースを開いた時にクリアケース越しに見る事が出来ます。
ただジャケットデザインはDVD版の方が好みでした。BDのケースではトリミングされていて画が窮屈な印象。
DVDリマスター版が非常に高画質だったので大幅な高画質化は期待していませんでしたが、買い替えて正解でした!
オープニングはそれ程違いは分かりませんが、エル・トポが虐殺された村に着いたシーンではハッキリと違いが分ります。
青空、砂漠、血の色が本当に綺麗になってます。1968年の「猿の惑星」のBlu-ray版に近い驚きがありました。
音声もMaster Audio仕様になって驚く程ではないが奥行きが増して多少は向上した印象でした。
メニュー画面が動きのあるものになっていたのが地味に嬉しかったです。
追加特典はないがフォトギャラリーがDVD版ではリモコン操作だったのが自動のスライドショー形式に変わっています。
DVDリマスター版をさらに底上げした内容でBlu-rayの恩恵は確実に受けています。
サンタ・サングレ/聖なる血 <HDニューマスター・デラックスエディション> [Blu-ray]にホドロフスキー3作を収納できるBOXが付いており
豪華特典版などは出ないと予想しますのでこの商品が最高の状態で鑑賞できるエル・トポかと。
-
Michael OttoReviewed in Germany on January 26, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars El Topo
Spannender Western, etwas blutrünstig, aber mit Kult-Status. Alejandro Jodorowsky hat für diesen Film nicht nur das Drehbuch geschrieben und Regie geführt, sondern er spielt auch die Rolle des El Topo (der Maulwurf)- Selbst Alejandros Sohn hat eine durchaus wichtige Rolle in dem Film.
- Greg LeBlancReviewed in Canada on October 19, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars I ordered and got it.
Previous review didn't go through.
How stupid.
So saying I ordered an item, it showed up as ordered and in good condition is not allowable?
Well. I ordered an item, it showed up. I'm happy. What more is there to say?
If this review gets rejected I'll just one star with no review.
-
Ale RosasReviewed in Mexico on April 4, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Llego en excelentes condiciones
Muy buena película y excelente el envío la película estaba nueva y ya la disfruto, gracias esta en español