Thursday, January 12, 2006

Meeting Werner Herzog

Meeting Werner Herzog


Essential Filmography

Fiction FeaturesAguirre, the Wrath of God (1972)
Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979)
Fitzcarraldo (1982)
Rescue Dawn (2006)
Landmark DocumentariesLessons of Darkness (1992)
Little Dieter Needs to Fly (1997)
Grizzly Man (2005)
Cave of Forgotten Dreams (2010)

🎬 The Herzog Filmography
  • A Camera with a "Natural Right": Herzog shot his first several films, including the masterpiece Aguirre, the Wrath of God, using a 35mm camera he stole from the Munich Film School.
  • The 300-Ton Ship: For Fitzcarraldo, he famously refused to use miniatures or special effects. Instead, he forced his crew to pull a real, 300-ton steamship over a mountain in the Amazon.
  • Mass Hypnosis: For his 1976 film Heart of Glass, Herzog had a professional hypnotist put almost the entire cast under a trance before every scene to achieve a specific, "otherworldly" performance style.
  • Seven Continents: He is the only feature film director to have shot a movie on every single continent, completing the set with the Antarctica documentary Encounters at the End of the World.
  • The No-Storyboard Rule: Herzog famously despises storyboards and never uses them, preferring to keep the production spontaneous and reactive to the environment.
  • Volcanic Stakes: To film the documentary La SoufriΓ¨re, Herzog and two cameramen stayed on a Caribbean island that was being evacuated due to an imminent, catastrophic volcanic eruption just to interview one man who refused to leave.
  • Speed Writing: He typically writes his screenplays in an incredibly short burst of just 4 to 5 days, relying on a "sense of urgency" to dictate the story's direction.

Herzog's work is characterized by "Ecstatic Truth"—the search for a deeper, poetic reality beyond mere facts.

πŸŽ₯ The "Ecstatic Truth" of Werner Herzog
  • The Stolen Camera: Herzog famously stole his first 35mm camera from the Munich Film School. He didn't consider it theft, but a "natural right" to a tool he needed to breathe life into his art.
  • Shoe for Dinner: After losing a bet to fellow director Errol Morris, Herzog publicly cooked and ate his own shoe at a film premiere—an event captured in the documentary Werner Herzog Eats His Shoe.
  • Unstoppable Interview: While being interviewed by the BBC in a park, Herzog was shot in the abdomen with an air rifle. He calmly looked at the wound and insisted on finishing the interview, famously stating, "It's not significant".
  • Action Hero: In 2006, he happened upon Joaquin Phoenix after a car crash in Hollywood. Herzog helped Phoenix out of the wreckage and prevented him from lighting a cigarette while gasoline was leaking from the car.
  • The Great Walk: When his mentor Lotte Eisner fell ill, Herzog believed she would survive if he walked from Munich to Paris to see her. He made the 500-mile journey on foot in winter; she lived for eight more years.
  • Global Vision: He is the only feature film director to have shot a film on all seven continents, including Antarctica for Encounters at the End of the World.
  • "Star Wars" Outsider: Despite playing the menacing "Client" in The Mandalorian, Herzog admitted he had never actually seen a Star Wars film before joining the cast.