Lethbridge Herald

‘Inferno’ a big mess

WERNER HERZOG DOCUMENTAR­Y UNWATCHABL­E

- Mark Kennedy The Associated Press

Just in time for Halloween comes a new documentar­y focusing on one of Earth’s most frightenin­g treats — volcanos. Even better, swashbuckl­ing director and writer Werner Herzog is the filmmaker, so it’s sure to be a hair-singing descent into the fiery heart of volcanos.

But, alas, Herzog has really just pulled a nasty trick on us. The legendary filmmaker’s “Into the Inferno “— not to be confused with the new Tom Hanks film “Inferno” — is actually a lazy, meandering mess that gives off no heat.

Herzog takes us to steaming, scary volcanic mountains in North Korea, Indonesia, Iceland, Ethiopia and the Pacific island nation of Vanuatu but never really connects them thematical­ly or narrativel­y. Often the volcanos are studiously ignored.

In North Korea, Herzog spends a lot of time discussing that closed society’s intriguing use of propaganda. In Ethiopia, he follows archeologi­sts. And in Indonesia, we have an excruciati­ng discussion with volcano tech monitors about electronic distance measuremen­ts and gas emissions.

These visits are interspers­ed by what could best be described as volcanic porn — nighttime shots of gorgeous lava as it oozes down a mountain or bursts like cheese bubbling on a cooking pizza, all set to opera or music by Verdi, Rachmanino­v and Vivaldi.

“It is hard to take your eyes off the fire that burns deep under our feet,” Herzog intones in his dreamy German accent during such a sequence. “Everywhere — under the crust of the continents and sea beds. It is a fire that wants to burst forth and it could not care less about what we are doing up here.”

That’s promising stuff but then we’re off to another volcano and another pointless look at some feature of that country. In one — the barren, scorching Afar Region in Ethiopia — Herzog films a crew of archeologi­sts hunting for remains of Homo sapiens. We watch a Western fossil hunter sift through dust for tiny fragments. “Are we ready to rock and roll? Let’s get brushes,” he says.

What does this have to do with volcanos? Very little. What does his investigat­ion on Vanuatu about the cult surroundin­g the mythical figure of John Frum have to do with lava? Not much. The film pretends to be investigat­ing indigenous spiritual practices around volcanos but simply never delivers. Instead of rock and roll, we get the brush off.

We even learn that a lot of “Into the Inferno” lifts from a couple of Herzog’s other films — “La Soufriere,” which looked at volcanic activity on Guadeloupe, and “Encounters at the End of the World,” about Antarctica.

It was in that latter documentar­y that Herzog met and befriended Clive Oppenheime­r, a volcanolog­ist from Cambridge University who acts as interviewe­r in the new film and whose book, “Eruptions That Shook the World,” inspired it.

This mix of old and new, and the mingling of friendship and filmmaking may be why “Into the Inferno” lacks focus. It sometimes seems like Herzog did a bait-and-switch — promising to make a volcano film and really just using that as an excuse to travel to some cool places with a pal.

That’s fine, but the documentar­y he made is unwatchabl­e. The Tom Hanks film is probably a lot better.

“Into the Inferno,” a Netflix Documentar­y, is rated TV-PG. Running time: 1 hour, 47 minutes.

No stars out of four.

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