“A potent, vaporous fever dream; a meditation on truth, lie, illusion, and time that floats like an aromatic haze through Herzog’s vivid reconstruction of Onoda’s war.” —The New York Times Book Review The national bestseller by the great filmmaker Werner Herzog. The great filmmaker Werner Herzog, in his first novel, tells the incredible story of Hiroo Onoda, a Japanese soldier who defended a small island in the Philippines for twenty-nine years after the end of World War II In 1997, Werner Herzog was in Tokyo to direct an opera. His hosts asked him, Whom would you like to meet? He replied instantly: Hiroo Onoda. Onoda was a former soldier famous for having quixotically defended an island in the Philippines for decades after World War II, unaware the fighting was over. Herzog and Onoda developed an instant rapport and met many times, talking and unraveling the story of Onoda’s long war. At the end of 1944 on Lubang Island, with Japanese troops about to withdraw, Onoda stayed behind under orders from his superior officer. For years, Onoda continued to fight his fictitious war—at first with other soldiers, and then, finally, alone, a character in a novel of his own making. In The Twilight World, Herzog immortalizes and imagines Onoda’s years of absurd yet epic struggle in an inimitable, hypnotic style—part documentary, part poem, and part dream—that will be instantly recognizable to fans of his films. The result is a novel completely unto itself: a glowing, dancing meditation on the purpose and meaning we give our lives.
Newly repackaged as a Penguin paperback, Conquest of the Useless, the legendary filmmaker Werner Herzog's diary of the making of Fitzcarraldo, one of his most revered and classic films In 1982, the visionary directory Werner Herzog released Fitzcarraldo, a lavish film about a would-be rubber baron who pulls a 320-ton steamship over a mountain. It was hailed instantly by critics around the globe as a masterpiece and won Herzog the 1982 Outstanding Director Prize at the Cannes Film Festival, affirming Herzog’s reputation as one of the most revered and enigmatic filmmakers of his time. Conquest of the Useless is the diary Herzog kept during the making of Fitzcarraldo, compiled from June 1979 to November 1981. Emerging as if out of an Amazonian fever dream during filming, Herzog’s writings are an extraordinary documentary unto themselves. Strange and otherworldly events are recounted by the filmmaker. The crew's camp in the heart of the jungle is attacked and burned to the ground; the production of the film clashes with a border war; and, of course, Herzog unravels the impossible logistics of moving a 320-ton steamship over a hill without the use of special effects. In his preface, Herzog warns that the diary entries collected in Conquest of the Useless do not represent “reports on the actual filming” but rather “inner landscapes, born of the delirium of the jungle.” Thus begins an extraordinary glimpse into the mind of a genius during the making of one of his greatest achievements.
Legendary filmmaker and celebrated author Werner Herzog tells in his inimitable voice the story of his epic artistic career in a long-awaited memoir that is as inventive and daring as anything he has done before Werner Herzog was born in September 1942 in Munich, Germany, at a turning point in the Second World War. Soon Germany would be defeated and a new world would have to be made out the rubble and horrors of the war. Fleeing the Allied bombing raids, Herzog’s mother took him and his older brother to a remote, rustic part of Bavaria where he would spend much of his childhood hungry, without running water, in deep poverty. It was there, as the new postwar order was emerging, that one of the most visionary filmmakers of the next seven decades was formed. Until age 11, Herzog did not even know of the existence of cinema. His interest in films began at age 15, but since no one was willing to finance them, he worked the night shift as a welder in a steel factory. He started to travel on foot. He made his first phone call at age 17, and his first film in 1961 at age 19. The wildly productive working life that followed—spanning the seven continents and encompassing both documentary and fiction—was an adventure as grand and otherworldly as any depicted in his many classic films. Every Man for Himself and God Against All is at once a personal record of one of the great and self-invented lives of our time, and a singular literary masterpiece that will enthrall fans old and new alike. In a hypnotic swirl of memory, Herzog untangles and relives his most important experiences and inspirations, telling his story for the first and only time.
“Hypnotic….It is ever tempting to try to fathom his restless spirit and his determination to challenge fate.” —Janet Maslin, New York Times Werner Herzog (Grizzly Man) is one of the most revered and enigmatic filmmakers of our time, and Fitzcarraldo is one of his most honored and admired films. More than just Herzog’s journal of the making of the monumental, problematical motion picture, which involved, among other things, major cast changes and reshoots, and the hauling (without the use of special effects) of a 360-ton steamship over a mountain , Conquest of the Useless is a work of art unto itself, an Amazonian fever dream that emerged from the delirium of the jungle. With fascinating observations about crew and players—including Herzog’s lead, the somewhat demented internationally renowned star Klaus Kinski—and breathtaking insights into the filmmaking process that are uniquely Werner Herzog, Conquest of the Useless is an eye-opening look into the mind of a cinematic master.
An invaluable set of career-length interviews with the German genius hailed by François Truffaut as "the most important film director alive" Most of what we've heard about Werner Herzog is untrue. The sheer number of false rumors and downright lies disseminated about the man and his films is truly astonishing. Yet Herzog's body of work is one of the most important in postwar European cinema. His international breakthrough came in 1973 with Aguirre, The Wrath of God, in which Klaus Kinski played a crazed Conquistador. For The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser, Herzog cast in the lead a man who had spent most of his life institutionalized, and two years later he hypnotized his entire cast to make Heart of Glass. He rushed to an explosive volcanic Caribbean island to film La Soufrière, paid homage to F. W. Murnau in a terrifying remake of Nosferatu, and in 1982 dragged a boat over a mountain in the Amazon jungle for Fitzcarraldo. More recently, Herzog has made extraordinary "documentary" films such as Little Dieter Needs to Fly. His place in cinema history is assured, and Paul Cronin's volume of dialogues provides a forum for Herzog's fascinating views on the things, ideas, and people that have preoccupied him for so many years.
In late November 1974, filmmaker Werner Herzog received a phone call from Paris delivering some terrible news. German film historian, mentor, and close friend Lotte Eisner was seriously ill and dying. Herzog was determined to prevent this and believed that an act of walking would keep Eisner from death. He took a jacket, a compass, and a duffel bag of the barest essentials, and wearing a pair of new boots, set off on a three-week pilgrimage from Munich to Paris through the deep chill and snowstorms of winter. Of Walking in Ice is Herzog’s beautifully written, much-admired, yet often-overlooked diary account of that journey. Herzog documents everything he saw and felt on his quest to his friend’s bedside, from poetic descriptions of the frozen landscape and harsh weather conditions to the necessity of finding shelter in vacant or abandoned houses and the intense loneliness of his solo excursion. Includes, for the first time, Werner Herzog’s 1982 “Tribute to Lotte Eisner” upon her receipt of the Helmut Käutner Prize
Le photographe suisse B. Presser a travaillé des années durant avec W. Herzog et K. Kinski.Dans cent photographies il montre la dynamique et l'énergie communicactive qui animent ce grand cinéaste. Ceux qui l'ont accompagné dans sa voie V. Schlöndorff, P. Berling, H.Achternbusch, Lena Herzog, C. Cardinale, de même que H.H. Prinzler livrent leur perception du phénomène Herzog. Le volume est complété par une filmographie ainsi qu'un répertoire des opéras mis en scène par W. Herzog.
In the winter of 1974, filmmaker Werner Herzog made a three week solo journey from Munich to Paris on foot. He believed it was the only way his close friend, film historian Lotte Eisner, would survive a horrible sickness that had overtaken her.
I do not follow ideas, I stumble into stories or into people; and I know that this is so big, I have to make a film. Very often, films come like uninvited guests, like burglars in the middle of the night. They are in your kitchen; something is stirring, you wake up at 3 a.m. and all of a sudden they come wildly swinging at you. When I write a screenplay, I write it as if I have the whole film in front of my eyes. Then it is very easy for me, and I can write very, very fast. It is almost like copying. But of course sometimes I push myself; I read myself into a frenzy of poetry, reading Chinese poets of the eighth and ninth century, reading old Icelandic poetry, reading some of the finest German poets like Hölderlin. All of this has absolutely nothing to do with the idea of my film, but I work myself up into this kind of frenzy of high-caliber language and concepts and beauty. And then sometimes I push myself by playing music, for example, a piano concerto by Beethoven, and I play it and write furiously. But none of this is an answer to the question of how you focus on a single idea for a film. And then, during shooting, you have to depart from it sometimes, while keeping it alive in its essence. —Werner Herzog, on filmmaking Werner Herzog doesn’t write traditional screenplays. He writes fever dreams brimming with madness, greed, humor, and dark isolation that can shift dramatically during production—and have materialized into extraordinary masterpieces unlike anything in film today. Harnessing his vision and transcendent reality, these four pieces of long-form prose earmark a renowned filmmaker at the dawn of his career.
The second in a series: the master filmmaker’s prose scenarios for four of his notable films On the first day of editing Fata Morgana, Werner Herzog recalls, his editor said: “With this kind of material we have to pretend to invent cinema.” And this, Herzog says, is what he tries to do every day. In this second volume of his scenarios, the peerless filmmaker’s genius for invention is on clear display. Written in Herzog’s signature fashion—more prose poem than screenplay, transcribing the vision unfolding before him as if in a dream—the four scenarios here (three never before translated into English) reveal an iconoclastic craftsman at the height of his powers. Along with his template for the film poem Fata Morgana (1971), this volume includes the scenarios for Herzog’s first two feature films, Signs of Life (1968) and Even Dwarfs Started Small (1970), along with the hypnotic Heart of Glass (1976). In a brief introduction, Herzog describes the circumstances surrounding each scenario, inviting readers into the mysterious process whereby one man’s vision becomes every viewer’s waking dream.
For the first time in English, and in his signature prose poetry, the film scripts of four of Werner Herzog’s early works “Herzog doesn’t write traditional scripts,” Film International remarked of the master filmmaker’s Scenarios I and II. “Instead, he writes scenarios which are like a hybrid of film, fiction, and prose poetry.” Continuing a series that Publishers Weekly pronounced “compulsively readable . . . equal parts challenging and satisfying, infuriating and enlightening,” Scenarios III presents, for the first time in English, the shape-shifting scripts for four of Werner Herzog’s early films: Stroszek; Nosferatu, Phantom of the Night; Where the Green Ants Dream; and Cobra Verde. We can observe Herzog’s working vision as each of these scenarios unfolds in a form often dramatically different from the film’s final version—as, in his own words, Herzog works himself up into “this kind of frenzy of high-caliber language and concepts and beauty.” With Scenarios I and II, this volume completes the picture of Herzog’s earliest work, affording a view of the filmmaker mastering his craft, well on his way to becoming one of the most original, and most celebrated, artists in his field.
Pilgrims covers two events of great significance in the Buddhist calendar. The Kalachakra ceremony was scheduled to take place in Bodhgaya, India, in January 2002. Although the ritual was cancelled, half a million pilgrims from all over the world descended on this village to catch a glimpse of the Dalai Lama. Several months later, the Sakya Dawa festival, which marks the anniversary of Buddha's birth and death, took place near Mount Kailash in western Tibet. Tens of thousands made the pilgrimage around the mountain - young, old, sick and healthy - walking by day amidst rock, sand and snow, and sleeping by night in the open.
Fitzcarraldo (diventato per mano del suo stesso autore un film leggendario), è l’emozionante vagabondaggio di una fantasia ben decisa a rifiutare la frustrazione quotidiana dell’homo sapiens, e di continuo stimolata, con scarti non controllabili, verso l’evasione. Inconfondibilmente il protagonista vi riprende i tratti di un altro eroe di Herzog, quel fantasma corrusco che dal buio dello schermo subito ci ha penetrati e invasi: Aguirre. Come lui, vive, senza ostacoli interiori, un delirio di grandezza; come lui, contrappone allo squallore di una società dai ruoli predeterminati l’ipotesi della conquista di un lontano, di un inconoscibile. A differenza di lui, non sigilla la sconfitta con la nota lacerante del dramma; accetta invece la realtà, quando apparentemente il gioco è chiuso, per sabotarla, per minarla, per corromperla con lo strumento sottile dell’ironia. Questo estremo conquistador, arrivato con tre secoli di ritardo in un’Amazzonia stuprata dagli speculatori del caucciù, affronta «il paese sognante», come gli indigeni chiamano la foresta solcata dal fiume immenso, non per arricchirsi, ma per fissare se stesso in uno spazio e in un tempo che sa già improbabili, per fondare, tracciando confini che la prima pioggia dissolverà, una città, ma d’aria, di nuvole, che porti il suo nome. Parte, su un battello sconnesso, al suono di melodie verdiane, diffuse, per il gran mare verde, da un vecchio grammofono, cantate dalla voce di Caruso; e ritorna nel clangore della Valchiria wagneriana. In questa sostituzione, amara e spiritosa, sta la risposta di Fitzcarraldo al mondo: spenta la fiamma patetica del cuore, il suo viaggio continuerà, nei meandri della foresta di cemento, come freddo, astuto artifizio della ragione. Giorgio Cusatelli
Las esperadísimas memorias del gran cineasta alemán Werner Herzog, uno de los últimos grandes aventureros de nuestro tiempo. Las historias de Herzog llegan a los límites de la experiencia humana: transportó un barco de vapor por una montaña en la jungla, caminó de Munich a París en pleno invierno, descendió a un volcán activo, vivió en la naturaleza entre osos pardos... una vida única. Un registro personalísimo de una de las grandes vidas autoinventadas de nuestro tiempo y un hipnótico remolino de recuerdos, en el que Herzog cuenta su historia por primera y única vez.
Esta autobiografia tem origem na curiosidade irrequieta do diretor Werner Herzog, no seu fascínio com as questões fundamentais da existência e na observação minuciosa dos fenômenos da natureza e do ser humano, características que também marcam e definem sua aclamada obra cinematográfica. Nos episódios narrados, os personagens são familiares, amigos, colaboradores, amores e até mesmo os heróis míticos da infância passada em Sachrang, "a mais remota de todas as aldeias na Baviera" — onde o cineasta aprendeu a ordenhar vacas muito antes de fazer filmes. As memórias aqui são acompanhadas pela constatação de que o destino, tal qual um roteiro cinematográfico, sempre reserva algumas reviravoltas. Composto de luzes e sombras, este livro traz a caverna de Chauvet, preservada no escuro de seu interior, ou o poço fundo em que Herzog muitas vezes se viu desempenhando o "trabalho estranho que os filmes exigem". Aqui cintilam lanternas de carbureto e o cosmo magnífico com o qual um dia ele se reencontrou e teve a certeza de que sua vida não seria ordinária. Ao revisitar personagens e expedições, temas, filmes, óperas, livros e momentos de alta tensão em que, para realizar sua obra, se manteve como um equilibrista cercado por abismos, Werner Herzog volta a mergulhar em profundezas insondáveis para de lá emergir com a mais fantástica das histórias: a sua própria.
Eleven conversations taken from as many issues of Fata Morgana. Eleven conversations which synthesize the project behind the journal which was born in spring 2006. At the time it was decided against having an editorial comment because of the conviction that if the journal was going to succeed it would speak for itself. However, the time has come to say a few words. A journal is first and foremost a collective gesture whose outline creates a field. The gesture made by Fata Morgana, which at the beginning was only an intuition and then it slowly developed, is the same one that makes cinema a place and an opportunity to think about contemporaneity. It is not simply about what happens around us; it is what emerges from within the events which gather around a concept: from the concept of Bíos (issue No. 0) to the concept of the Sacred (issue No. 10). In this perspective, cinema needs to be interpreted and understood as having its own un-specific specificity. It needs to be interpreted and understood in its principal form where it is capable of categorizing its un-specificity, in other words, its autonomous form where it can categorize its heteronomy. This means thinking about a concept starting from cinema, and thinking about cinema starting from the concept. Thus, cinema becomes a special place and an opportunity to think about the universality of the concept (as a marker of contemporaneity) and the concept becomes the perspective from which to conceive cinema. By avoiding the double edged sword of a sterile specificity or of a self serving un-specificity cinema becomes the quintessential way of thinking about modernity where autonomy of aesthetical form is affirmed in its heteronomy, and its individuation imposes itself as a dis-individuation.
Arrossegar un vaixell de vapor dalt d'una muntanya en plena selva amazònica, baixar a volcans actius per estudiar-ne els enigmes naturals o conviure amb un grup d'ossos grizzly són algunes de les experiències radicals que Werner Herzog ha triat viure i documentar amb una veu singular i inimitable. La seva vida personal, com no podia ser d'altra manera, ha estat sempre a l'altura del mite: de nen va créixer pobre i lliure en un poblet dels Alps; després de la Segona Guerra Mundial, d'adolescent, va recórrer món buscant aventures que quasi li van costar la vida, i, abans de convertir-se en un dels directors més famosos del món, va anar caminant de Múnic a París, en ple hivern, per evitar la mort de la seva mentora. Als vuitanta-un anys, Herzog explica la seva història per primera vegada i, d'una banda, repassa la seva carrera artística —tan èpica, original i transgressora com les pel·lícules—, amb detalls sobre les filmacions, la seva relació amb Klaus Kinski o Bruce Chatwin; d'una altra, dedica pàgines a qüestions més personals com ara la infantesa, els lligams dels pares amb el nazisme o la relació amb les dones de la seva vida. Cadascú a la seva i Déu contra tothom, mig memòries mig dietari, està escrita amb una prosa poderosa i plaent i revela les influències i les idees que han impulsat l'art de Herzog i han configurat la seva peculiaríssima visió del món.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.