Essential Filmography
Fiction Features
• Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972)
• Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979)
• Fitzcarraldo (1982)
• Rescue Dawn (2006)
• Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979)
• Fitzcarraldo (1982)
• Rescue Dawn (2006)
Landmark Documentaries
• Lessons of Darkness (1992)
• Little Dieter Needs to Fly (1997)
• Grizzly Man (2005)
• Cave of Forgotten Dreams (2010)
• 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 Soufrière, 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.
🎥 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.
Wow, Ray... Congrats! I think I've heard his name before, but I'm not too sure if I've ever seen anything he's directed before though. :(
ReplyDeleteWell, that's cool dude! Were the others around when you got you're dvd signed?
Very nice.
ReplyDeleteCan't BELIEVE I friggin' MISSED THIS. Werner! One of the greatest single living directors!
ReplyDeleteHerzog came to my class a few months back and presented "Rescue Dawn" and chatted with us a little. Cool guy...Definately doesn't mind long conversations with random people. The only sad thing, in a class of over 50 people, I'd say only about six (including me and the instructor) knew who this guy was.
ReplyDelete