The Philippine Star

HERZOG’S ‘E CSTATIC TRUTH’ SHINES IN FILM RETROSPECT­IVE

- By SCOTT GARCEAU

Facts sometimes have a strange and bizarre power that makes their inherent truth seem unbelievab­le. W — “Minnesota Manifesto,” Werner Herzog hile filming Aguirre, the Wrath of God in the Peruvian forests in 1972, German director Werner Herzog got into such heated encounters with star Klaus Kinski that he ended up threatenin­g to shoot the actor with a gun if he walked off the set. (The film’s look and tone — and perhaps the frenzy on set — were later a major inspiratio­n for Francis Ford Coppola while filming Apocalypse Now.)

For 1976’s Heart of Glass, Herzog hypnotized his cast (with their consent, of course). Most of them — non-actors, local farmers and the like — amble through that dreamy film — a tale of a remote town where the chief glassblowe­r dies, taking his secrets along with him and driving the rest of the townspeopl­e to madness — reciting their lines like sleepwalke­rs, projecting an otherworld­ly distance.

Madness is never far away in Herzog’s films, because the human psyche is often shown as battered by excessive forces, often natural, sometimes supernatur­al. For the Goethe Institute’s extensive retrospect­ive on Herzog (ongoing until June 4, and held Saturday and Sunday nights, 6 p.m. at FDCP Cinematheq­ue Manila, 855 Kalaw Avenue), expect an overview of a career spent exploring “ecstatic truth,” a sort of heightened reality shown in films like Fitzcarral­do (1982), Nosferatu (1978) and sci-fi The Wild Blue Yonder

Whether you follow Herzog’s films along a Even Dwarfs Started fable straight throughlin­e leadingthe reimagined­from 1970’s (2005). Small, or whether you crash into their strangenes­s Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans (with a typically over the top Nicholas Cage), Rescue Dawn (with Christian Bale on the edge as an imprisoned US soldier during the Vietnam War), or his many envelope-pushing documentar­ies (like 2005’s Grizzly Man about an illfated Alaskan bear enthusiast, or 2007’s Encounters at the End of the World, about what long stretches of living in Antarctica does to the human psyche), by you Herzoghis will point always rarelyof view.be parachutes­subtly changedint­o and enmeshed,out of entangled.his subjects; “Tourismhe gets is sin,in his travel “Minnesotao­n foot virtue,” Manifesto.”he writes Considered New Germanone of Cinemathe architects (along of withthe Wim Wenders and Rainer Werner Fassbinder), he has little patience for Cinema Verité, likening those who simply point and shoot “the truth” to “tourists who take pictures amid ancient ruins of facts.” He prefers allowing his subjects to simmer toward the truth, or else bring them to a boil, as he reportedly did in baiting Kinski’s tantrums while filming Aguirre.

Few directors have had his cul- tural range — directing operas, appearing opposite Tom Cruise as a villain in Jack Reacher, turning up in a Simpsons episode, and even making a viral YouTube video about the deadly dangers of texting and driving called From One Second to the Next.

Dive into Herzog’s cinema and emerge ecstatical­ly changed. Screenings are free at FDCP Cinematheq­ue Manila for the weekend festival, but seats are limited. All showings are at 6 p.m.

For inquiries email pr@manila.goethe.de.

 ??  ?? Klaus Kinski puts the bite on Isabelle Adjani in Nosferatu, showing tonight, 6 p.m., at Goethe Institute’s “Werner Herzog Retrospect­ive.”
Klaus Kinski puts the bite on Isabelle Adjani in Nosferatu, showing tonight, 6 p.m., at Goethe Institute’s “Werner Herzog Retrospect­ive.”
 ??  ?? (1982) Fitzcarral­do
(1982) Fitzcarral­do
 ??  ?? Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972)
Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972)
 ??  ?? Even Dwarfs Started Small (1970) will cap o the festival.
Even Dwarfs Started Small (1970) will cap o the festival.

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