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Encounters at the End of the World (2007)

Director: Werner Herzog

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From Time Out New York

People watch Discovery Channel documentaries to satisfy an armchair-tourist curiosity about, say, the mating habits of penguins. They seek out Werner Herzog’s nonfiction nature films because he’ll (a) go beyond simply recording wild animals and (b) say something pretentious in a stern Teutonic accent that would give the Saxon hordes pause. His latest, financed by the cable network, doesn’t disappoint on either count. Despite the fact that he’s conducting a whirlwind tour of Antarctica, Herzog informs viewers that he won’t be chasing antarctic fowl; the director has other things on his mind, like why chimps don’t enlist inferior species as slaves (“They could straddle goats and ride off into the sunset”). When our host gets around to those lovable birds, his question is typically Herzogian: “Is there such a thing as insanity among penguins?!?”

You could snicker endlessly over the film’s ripe quotes, but then you’d risk missing the poignancy—and point—of the doc altogether. No stranger to extreme climates or personalities, Herzog zeroes in on Antarctica’s ability to attract scientific kooks, social misfits and philosophers. His portrait of the polar mind-set makes for fascinating anthropology despite the film’s flaws; Herzog’s take on the exterior landscapes may lack focus, but the keen attention he pays to interior geographies is perfect compensation.

Author: David Fear 2008-06-10 18:52:42

Time Out New York Issue 663: June 12 - 18, 2008


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  • julie said...
    Posted on Jun 16 2008 14:44 You hit the nail on the head: the "teutonic accent" and perspective are annoyingly center stage in the film, and yet the "portrait of the polar mind-set" is wonderfully, light-handedly rendered. But perhaps putting his accent and pretensions in our face, Herzog avoids a worse pretension: that of the objective viewpoint, in much the same way as he did by using a culturally dissonant opera soundtrack in the ethnographic documentary, Herdsmen of the Sun. Furthermore,a lack of focus is appropriate, even perhaps unavoidable, in a landscape such as that on the moon or in Antactica or under the sea, and in your review you failed to mention how breathtaking that lost and wandering footage is.
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Cast & crew

Director: Werner Herzog

Genre(s): Documentaries

Rated: G

Duration: 99 mins

US Release: Jun 13 2008

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