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Grizzly Man
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Directed by Werner Herzog.
Filmmaker Werner Herzog adds another real-life character to his growing pantheon of people who walk a fine line between visionary genius and madness in this documentary. Timothy Treadwell was a self-styled authority on bears who, starting in 1990, would spend as much time as possible each year in Alaska, camping out near a grizzly bear habitat. While Treadwell claimed to love the bears and felt as one with them, he had no formal training in their behavior, and while familiarizing himself with the creatures he would walk within a few feet of them with a video camera in hand. To many, Treadwell seemed part man of nature, part conjuror, and part self-promotion expert, but the part that guided his kinship with the bears failed him in 2003, when he and his girlfriend were killed in a grizzly attack. Treadwell shot hundreds of hours of footage of himself and the grizzlies, and Herzog has used this footage as the core of Grizzly Man, a documentary look at Treadwell's life and death, while also including interviews with people who knew him, animal experts, and scientists. Acclaimed British guitarist Richard Thompson composed and performed the film's musical score. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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unclefesteringunclefestering Pick a Pair
by unclefestering in Movie Games
hasn't rated it.
"If you wanted to pair two movies (not sequels) together what movies would you watch together and why? I'd pair The Bear with Grizzly Man. The Bear is a story of how an older grizzly takes care of a young bear who las lost his mother and how they just want to get along and wouldn't bother people at all if it wasn't for the mean hunters who are after them. Werner Herzog takes documentary footage from a man who was a self taught expert on bears, before he was eaten by them, and turned it into Grizzly Man. The other pairing I have would be F for Fake and The Hoax. In F for Fake, Orson Welles interviews Clifford Irving, a journalist who spent a fair amount of time interviewing a famous art forger, who could never be convicted. The Hoax tells the story of Irving a few years later when he created forged Howard Hughes diaries and sold them for fun and profit. What pairs do you have? " [More]
TenenbaumsTenenbaums Frosty Men
by Tenenbaums in Tenenbaums Blog
hasn't rated it.
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""Encounters at the End of the World," Werner Herzog's first documentary since "Grizzly Man" chronicles the lives of scientists living in the far reaches of Antarctica at McMurdo Station. The desolate community, resembling a mining town, is populated with an odd assortment of top researchers and those who are dubbed "Ph.Ds washing dishes."Set to a soundtrack of Gregorian chants and haunting strings, Herzog's cinematographer captures the wonders of this foreign land with simple beauty that resonates to the atmosphere. Snowy landscapes of incomprehensible magnitudes extend in all directions. Under the ice, creatures reminiscent of '50s sci-fi films thrive in the frigid waters and co-exist with microscopic organisms newly-discovered on a near daily basis.And then there are the penguins, the cinematically-famous animals which Herzog explicitly dismisses as intended subjects of his film. Keeping exposure to a minimum, the film instead features a purely comic and tragic side of the birds. ... " [More]
paulpaul Telluride 2007: Encounters at t ...
by paul in paul on spout.com
loved it.
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"Ever since he borrowed the other worldy footage of underwater Antarctica to make The Wild Blue Yonder (2005), Werner Herzog has wanted to make a film there himself. The National Science Foundation invited him to come. As, Herzog narrates in the introduction to Encounters at the End of the World, “I told them I would not make a movie about cute, fluffy penguins.” Herzog wants exploration, not a story. Among the questions he wants to explore is why do chimpanzees–clearly superior primates–not domesticate lesser animals? “A chimpanzee could climb on the back of a goat and ride into the sunset. But it doesn’t. Why?” Herzog asks in his dry, german accented monotone. Of course, he’s not studying chimpanzees in Antarctica, but he sets the tongue-in-cheek tone for the film. He’s a funny narrator, not nearly so severe as in Grizzly Man. But it is Werner Herzog. So, although he’s funny, he’s constantly reminding us we’re all doomed. The beauty of Antarctica is so monumental, its study is so ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: My favorite directors (by a ...
by Risselada in Directors
loved it.
"I don't know what's up with your avatar, but my favorite Herzog movie is probably The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser.Other popular ones are Stroszek, Aguirre, the Wrath of God, and Fitzcarraldo. And that's actually just some of his fictional narrative films. He has many documentaries too, of which his recent Grizzly Man is one of my favorites. " [More]
MovieBabeMovieBabe Grizzly Man - The Aristocrats
by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"By Tricia Olszewski David Letterman must be feeling pretty bad. Included in Werner Herzog’s Grizzly Man is a clip of the movie’s subject, self-anointed “bear expert” Timothy Treadwell, as a guest on Late Show a few years back. “Is it gonna happen that one day we read a news article about you being eaten by one of these bears?” Letterman teasingly asked Treadwell, who devoted 13 summers to living among grizzlies in Alaska. Nervous laughter followed, but Dave’s joke would eventually become very, very unfunny. Treadwell and a companion, Amie Huguenard, were mauled and, yes, eaten by one of the creatures they were allegedly protecting at Katmai National Park and Preserve in 2003, just before they were set to leave the Alaskan peninsula. What remained of their bodies—a rib cage, an arm, a “head with a little bit of backbone attached”—was discovered by the pilot who was to pick up Treadwell, as he’d been doing for ... " [More]
andthenpatternsandthenpatterns more for the subject than the s ...
by andthenpatterns in andthenpatterns Blog
liked it.
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"The subject of Herzog's film (a film for which he is more editor and narrator than director), Timothy Treadwell, is flamboyant, effusive and interesting enough to have made this a good doc anyway, but Herzog's brilliant use of Treadwell's footage elevates it beyond just that. Herzog has made a film which is part wildlife documentary, part biopic of Treadwell, and part analysis of Treadwell's film-making talent. It's captivating stuff, and more so because the end is so obvious and well known.Treadwell is such a marvellously watchable screen presence, a camped-up version of Steve Irwin, with girl troubles and a huge desire to be loved. The biopic part of the film is the story of an alcoholic finding purpose in protecting the animals he loves. But Treadwell's devotion to his cause is manic, and the way in which he chases his dream shows (in his own footage) quite how disturbed he was. Count, for instance, the number of times he tells an animal, in his babyish voice, that he loves it - ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: How About your Favorite FUN ...
by Risselada in HORROR MOVIES 101
loved it.
"That over-dramatic coroner in Grizzly Man is so fascinating! How can you say it was bad!? I have been declaring Grizzly Man as the best movie of 2005 since it came out! " [More]
JimBellJimBell Grizzly Man
by JimBell in JimBell Blog
lost interest.
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"Grizzly Man (2005) is, by all accounts, a good documentary, which makes me think there are two competing definitions of what makes a good documentary. One meaning is like “This is a brilliant example of the genre” and the other is like “You will really enjoy watching this.” Grizzly Man may well be the epitome of the genre, but it is not particularly good viewing. Mr. Treadwell, who spent 13 summers living among Alaskan grizzlies before being eaten, is instantly and continuously off-putting. Right from the start he is layers and layers removed from us. Although we see him “intimately” through the 100 hours of film footage he took, we really see a manic-depressive who has made himself into a character he thinks is appealing to school kids. He usually talks to the grizzlies and to us as if to children. He claims to be protecting the grizzlies, but they are usually in a park and poaching is almost non-existent. He claims to be studying them, but we s ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: Top 5 movies where the titl ...
by Risselada in Top 5
loved it.
"Grizzly Man and The Big Lebowski are perfect movies in my opinion, but I don't think either of them are the actual characters' name. " [More]
gotheregothere Hollywood Man
by gothere in You should go there
liked it.
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"One of many fascinating parts of this film was the explaination of its subject, Timothy Treadwell, and his days as a would-be actor in California. Before he re-invented himself as a natualist, filming himself in the woods tempting bears and fate, before he changed his name, he was runner to the Woody Harrelson's part in the TV series, Cheers. I'm not sure what to make of this except that Treadwell wanted first to be a star of the Hollywood persuasion. It's not the only part of the story. He was an alcoholic who believed found himself in nature, got clean, worked for nothing, entertained children, and found a cause. And a talent for survival. This film is quite amazing and beautiful and terrifying and sad. I liked it a lot. " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Grizzly Man is a fascinating nonfiction look at a character so brazen and bizarre, he must be fictional. Werner Herzog plays a more obtrusive role in this film than most documentarists would -- narrating and setting certain events in motion -- but he did not in fact create Timothy Treadwell, the ironically named crackpot who lived among bears in the Alaskan wilderness, eventually losing his life to them. There may have been no other way to do it, but Herzog reveals at the start that Treadwell died, which leaves his video footage as one of those priceless artifacts that charts the twists and turns on a path toward a known, inevitable outcome. Those in search of a snuff film will be disappointed, however; actual audio of Treadwell's mauling does exist, but Herzog refrains from playing it for the audience. He instead focuses on Treadwell's numerous episodes narrating to his camera, over years alongside the bears. These showcase all the ticks, irrationalities, bitter prejudices, manic highs, and depressive lows of this overwrought narcissist and self-proclaimed outcast, who resembles a longer-haired Aaron Eckhart. Less valuable are the interviews with Treadwell's eccentric former friends and acquaintances, whose contributions can border on the unintentionally comic. One particularly misguided scene involves Herzog presenting Treadwell's digital watch to an estranged (and strange) ex-girlfriend, and her getting lost in the profundity of an unsentimental object he didn't even own yet when she knew him. On average, though, Herzog has assembled a really telling portrait, giving the story a necessary spine, and smartly straddling the line between sympathy and criticism. Grizzly Man is one of the most vital documentaries of 2005, a film that reminds viewers that strange truth can be more engrossing than a writer's quirky fiction. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 



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