Premium Only Content

THE SARAGOSSA MANUSCRIPT (1965). In Polish with English subtitles.
THE SARAGOSSA MANUSCRIPT (Polish: Rękopis znaleziony w Saragossie, "The Manuscript found in Zaragoza") is a 1965 Polish film directed by Wojciech Has, based on the 1815 novel The Manuscript Found in Saragossa by Jan Potocki. Set primarily in Spain, it tells a frame story containing gothic, picaresque and erotic elements. In a deserted house during the Napoleonic Wars, two officers from opposing sides find a manuscript, which tells the tale of the Spanish officer's grandfather, Alphonso van Worden (Zbigniew Cybulski). Van Worden travelled in the region many years before, being plagued by evil spirits, and meeting such figures as a Qabalist, a sultan and a Romani person, who tell him further stories, many of which intertwine and interrelate with one another.
The film was a relative success in Poland and other parts of socialist eastern Europe upon its release. It later also achieved a level of critical success in the United States, when filmmakers such as Martin Scorsese and Francis Ford Coppola rediscovered it and encouraged its propagation.
In the 2015 poll conducted by Polish Museum of Cinematography in Łódź, The Saragossa Manuscript came second on the list of the greatest Polish films of all time.
PLOT:
During a battle in the Aragonese town of Saragossa (Zaragoza) during the Napoleonic Wars, an officer retreats to the second floor of an inn. He finds a large book with drawings of two men hanging on a gallows and two women in a bed. An enemy officer tries to arrest him but ends up translating the book for him; the second officer recognizes its author as his own grandfather, who was a captain in the Walloon Guard.
A flashback then recounts the tale of the ancestor, Alfonso van Worden, who appears with two servants, seeking the shortest route through the Sierra Morena Mountains. The two men warn him against taking his chosen route because it leads through haunted territory. At an apparently deserted inn, the Venta Quemada, he is invited to dine with two Moorish princesses, Emina and Zibelda, in a secret inner room. They inform the captain that they are his cousins and, as the last of the Gomelez line, he must marry them both to provide heirs. However, he must convert to Islam. He jokingly calls them ghosts, despite having told his servants with great bravado that ghosts do not exist. Then they seduce him and give him a skull goblet to drink from.
He wakes and finds himself back in the desolate countryside, lying next to a heap of skulls under a gallows. He meets a hermit priest who is trying to cure a possessed man; the latter tells his story, which also involves two sisters and a different kind of forbidden love. Alfonso sleeps in the hermitage's chapel, hearing strange voices at night.
When he wakes and rides off, he is captured by the Spanish Inquisition. He is rescued by the two princesses, aided by the gang of the Zoto brothers (two of whom had appeared dead on the ground near the gallows). Back in the inner room, the two princesses become amorous with Alfonso but they are interrupted by Sheikh Gomelez, who forces the captain at sword point to drink from the skull goblet.
Again Alfonso awakens at the gallows, but this time a cabalist is lying next to him. As they ride to the Cabalist's castle, they are joined by a skeptical mathematician, who remarks, "The human mind is ready to accept anything, if it is used knowingly." This ends part 1 of the film.
Part 2 is primarily filled with the nested tales told by the leader of a band of gypsies who visit the castle. "Frame story" or "tale-within-a-tale-within-a-tale" only begins to describe the complexity, because some of the inner tales intertwine, so that later tales shed new light on earlier experiences recounted by other characters. Multiple viewings of the film are recommended in order to comprehend the plot, as well as identify the appearance of certain characters before they are "introduced" by the gypsy raconteur to tell their own tales.
Finally, Alfonso is told to return to the Venta Quemada, where he meets the two princesses. They bid him farewell and the Sheikh gives him the large book so that he can write the end of his own story. The Sheikh explains that the whole adventure was a "game" designed to test Alfonso's character.
Alfonso wakes under the gallows again, but his two servants are nearby – it is as if they are about to begin the journey that he has just "dreamed". At the small inn in Saragossa, he writes in the large book until someone tells him that the two princesses are waiting for him. He flings the book aside and it lands on the table where his descendant's enemy found it at the beginning of the film.
-
LIVE
LFA TV
13 hours agoLFA TV ALL DAY STREAM - MONDAY 8/11/25
12,277 watching -
LIVE
Chicks On The Right
2 hours agoMTG fighting w/Levin, Pritzker humiliated by Welker, Mamdani squeals like a girl, and psychotic libs
1,774 watching -
LIVE
The Bubba Army
2 days agoAlligator Alcatraz Closed?! - Bubba the Love Sponge® Show | 8/11/25
6,780 watching -
29:03
DeVory Darkins
14 hours ago $6.40 earnedDemocrat Governors painfully HUMILIATED Trump drops BRUTAL WARNING for DC officials
7.03K53 -
14:44
Preston Stewart
18 hours ago $1.15 earnedTrump's Cartel Crackdown
5.08K6 -
1:05:58
Sarah Westall
15 hours agoForces Creating Massive Instability Worldwide: US, Ukraine, China, Israel, Colonel Douglas Macgregor
15.3K31 -
LIVE
BEK TV
1 hour agoTrent Loos in the Morning - 8/11/2025
114 watching -
3:45:16
Badlands Media
1 day agoThe Narrative Ep. 34: The World Eater
111K41 -
29:39
Afshin Rattansi's Going Underground
23 hours agoProf. Jeffrey Sachs: Will The Trump-Putin Meeting End the Ukraine Proxy War and Avert Nuclear War?
24.8K80 -
9:48:25
Rallied
16 hours ago $23.18 earnedWarzone Solo Challenges All Day w/ Ral
120K8