Jesus Christ Kinski by Benjamin Myers review – a trip inside the frazzled mind of Klaus Kinski

The Guardian 1 min read 14 hours ago

<p>The German actor’s real-life meltdown is the springboard for this compelling autofictional account, in which the author sets out to write about Kinski during lockdown</p><p>A show-stealing villain in spaghetti westerns and slasher&nbsp;flicks with titles such as Schizoid and Psychopath, the German actor Klaus Kinski – “a demented Teutonic version of Dennis Hopper”, as one tribute had it – is known best for&nbsp;his testy collaboration with Werner Herzog, whose 1982 film Fitzcarraldo put Kinski in the title role, lugging a steamship over the Andes. A terror on set as well as on screen, he was offered a part in Indiana Jones but told Steven Spielberg the Raiders of the Lost Ark script was a “pile of shit”.</p><p>Benjamin Myers’s new novel plunges us into Kinski’s fevered mind during one of his last performances, a&nbsp;recorded solo stage show in West Berlin in 1971, where he delivered a ferocious monologue as Jesus, “the freest and most modern of men, who preferred to be massacred than rot alive with all the others”. Showcased in a documentary released in 2008 by Peter Geyer, the act descended into chaos, Kinski arguing with hecklers before ending his monologue in a near-empty auditorium.</p> <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/books/2025/oct/20/jesus-christ-kinski-by-benjamin-myers-review-a-trip-inside-the-frazzled-mind-of-klaus-kinski">Continue reading...</a>
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