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Encounters at the End of the World
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Directed by Werner Herzog
Werner Herzog, director of such acclaimed documentaries as Grizzly Man and Little Dieter Needs to Fly, offers his unique perspective on the South Pole in this film profiling the Antarctic community of McMurdo Station. Located on Ross Island, McMurto Station is the headquarters of the National Science Foundation. Whether offering a detailed study of the unique survival training regiment that newcomers to McMurdo are obligated to endure or pondering the majestic beauty of a landscape where the discovery of three new species in a single day is nothing to get excited about, Herzog boldly offers viewers the opportunity to visit one of the most inaccessible and awe-inspiring landscapes on the planet. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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paulpaul Telluride 2007: Encounters at t ...
by paul in paul on spout.com
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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 do " [More]
TenenbaumsTenenbaums Frosty Men
by Tenenbaums in Tenenbaums Blog
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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 resona " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog THINKFilm & “Germ-alism”
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
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"Yesterday, I posted about Jamie Stuart’s In Spring, a video which had the filmmaker visiting the offices of THINKFilm and turning an interview with Werner Herzog (ostensibly occasioned by the impending release of Encounters at the End of the World) into––I thought––a brilliant piece of satire on the current state of indie film distribution in general and, unavoidably, the rumored struggles of THINKFilm in particular. It was also, on a not entirely subtextual level, about the thorny relationshi " [More]
KarinaKarina THINKFilm & “Germ-alism”
by Karina in Karina on SpoutBlog
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"Yesterday, I posted about Jamie Stuart’s In Spring, a video which had the filmmaker visiting the offices of THINKFilm and turning an interview with Werner Herzog (ostensibly occasioned by the impending release of Encounters at the End of the World) into––I thought––a brilliant piece of satire on the current state of indie film distribution in general and, unavoidably, the rumored struggles of THINKFilm in particular. It was also, on a not entirely subtextual level, about the thorny relationshi " [More]
slipofthetongueslipofthetongue L.A. Filmfest Review: Encounter ...
by slipofthetongue in SlipOfTheTongue Blog
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"I have never seen a Werner Herzog film so this is the perspective of one who is essentially experiencing his filmmaking for the first time. Take from that what you will. I have been aware of Herzog's work for years and have nibbled around the edges but never jumped in. I nearly rented Fitzcarraldo more than a dozen times and almost saw both Rescue Dawn and Grizzly Man in recent years. Both films sounded fascinating, as did this one. Perhaps it was the inherent blea " [More]
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tadivtadiv A quick summary of what I saw a ...
by tadiv in Telluride
"We saw the following films at the 2007 Telluride Film Festival...Features: The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days, The Band’s Visit, The Counterfeiters, When Did You Last See Your Father?, Persepolis, Terror’s Advocate, Jar City, Blind Mountain, People on Sunday, Encounters at the End of the World, I’m Not There, Juno, The Savages, Bergman Island: Ingmar Bergman on Faro Island, Cinema & Life, For the Love of Movies: The Story of American Film Criti " [More]
porcupineporcupine FilmCouch #36
by porcupine in FilmCouch
"Stories from the Telluride Film Festival, 2007. Paul talks to surrogate father figures Leonard Maltin and Werner Herzog (who was showing his Antarctica doc, Encounters at the End of the World). Karina weighs in on Brian DePalma's divisive Iraq film, Redacted. Kevin eventually gets a chance to ask Sean Penn about directing Into the Wild. " [More]
mercurialmercurial Encounters at the End of the World
by mercurial in Trailer Park
"Undoubtedly going to be one of those films that you just go, "Wow." Encounters at the End of the World: HD 480p " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
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Any filmgoer who's been fortunate enough to have seen director Werner Herzog's best works knows well the poetic power and remarkable mastery of his imagery, pacing, and overall tone. This not only applies to Herzog's narrative features, but -- somewhat uniquely -- to his documentary films as well. In his 2005 documentary Grizzly Man, Herzog painted a fascinating portrait of a true outsider whose unbound passion for nature ultimately brought upon his untimely death. With Encounters at the End of the World, Herzog continues this long trend of profiling people on the fringes of society, this time focusing on the small community of "professional dreamers" who live and work at the National Science Foundation's Antarctic headquarters. The result is a film that is at once mesmerizing and captivating, due both to the surroundings he explores and to the fascinating people he meets. Opening to reveal the majestic beauty of the underwater kingdom that sits just beneath McMurdo Station in the South Pole, the first frames of the film make it easy to see why Herzog wanted to travel to this remote corner of the globe and interview its curious inhabitants. Herzog is a man with many questions about nature, though they aren't necessarily the kind of questions you would see posed on your average National Geographic special; he ultimately proves himself to be just as interested in exploring the dreams and motivations of the scientists themselves as he is in the environment they're researching. The people Herzog speaks with are just as colorful and interesting as the surroundings they reside in, and as a result, the film proves as stimulating intellectually as it is visually. With titles like "Forklift driver/Philosopher" the inhabitants of the various field camps visited by Herzog always have an interesting story to tell, and whether he's speaking with the community bus driver or the neutrino physicist, he's got a fascinating knack for drawing those stories out. An interview with a cell biologist preparing for his last professional dive turns unexpectedly profound as the director's brooding subject begins to ponder the microscopic horrors that await him on the ocean floor, and later, a casual conversation with a notoriously reticent penguin researcher leads to one of the film's most poignant moments, after Herzog attempts to liven the conversation by playfully inquiring about insanity among penguins. Likewise, his consistent practice of allowing the camera to linger on his subjects long after they've completed their thoughts draws out their true inner nature in a way that not even the best questions can. Occasionally going back to the topic of Ernest Shackleton and his historic trek across the Antarctic, Herzog skillfully raises important questions about the changing ways we view the world we live in, the true nature of exploration, and, ultimately, the sustainability of human life on planet Earth. Indeed, repeated scenes of divers drifting under a seemingly infinite ceiling of ice ultimately take on the air of NASA footage of astronauts floating in space (albeit much more colorful), and Herzog himself admits that the McMurdo Station -- nestled completely self-contained in a vast stretch of nothingness -- could well stand as an earthly blueprint for future deep-space settlements. Later, as the researchers descend into the enormous vents along the slopes of a volcano and explore an underground tunnel housing a curious time capsule to be preserved for discovery by future generations, their philosophies combine with the otherworldly imagery and music to create something that is truly sublime. Perhaps these dreamers who somehow ended up at the true end of the Earth are on to something after all. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
 

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