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Telluride 2007: Werner Herzog

Paul Moore
By Paul Moore posted 1 year ago
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Werner Herzog

I got five minutes to talk to Werner Herzog (it felt like an hour at the time). He’s here with his new documentary on Antarctica, Encounters at the End of the World. But when you get five minutes with a living legend, you don’t want to spend it on a movie synopsis you can read online. So, we talk about life, risk and how his mom quit smoking.

Note: I reference Dieter Dengler of Herzog’s Rescue Dawn and Little Dieter Needs to Fly as well as a panel discussion he was on regarding Sean Penn’s Into the Wild.

Werner Herzog interview

Herzog_Penn_Krakauer

John Krakauer, Sean Penn, Werner Herzog and moderator on a TFF 2007 panel discussion

Werner Herzog, Encounters at the End of the World

 
 Werner Herzog interview [5:08m]: Play Now | Download

RESCUE DAWN: No Longer Patriotic?

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 1 year ago
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rescue-dawn-1.jpgMGM’s decision to release Werner Herzog’s Rescue Dawn on July 4 was more than just a clever Transformers counter-programming gambit: it was an implicit attempt to mark the German director’s POW drama, a dramatic remake of his own documentary Little Dieter Needs To Fly, as a red state-targeted tribute to American patriotism. And to some extent, it worked: conservative film blog LIBERTAS called Rescue “a good old-fashioned patriotic war film”, but reserved their highest praise for the film’s director. “Herzog is a genius and a true iconoclast. He’s a rebel and a free-thinker. The lemmings desperate to be loved and fit in make the other kind of war film, the true counter-culture makes this kind.” And in blog post dated July 27, conservative commentator Debbie Schlussel named Rescue Dawn “the best movie of the year.”

Less than a month later, Schlussel has changed her tune considerably. In a post on her website dated August 16, Schlussel points to site called Rescue Dawn: The Truth, which claims that Herzog altered facts in Rescue Dawn in order to make Dieter Dengler appear to be more of a hero than he actually was. The site bears the signature of Pisidhi Indradat, who says he was imprisoned alongside Dengler but was omitted from Rescue Dawn; and Jerry DeBruin, brother of Gene DeBruin, who was played in the film by Jeremy Davies.

DeBruin and Indradat are primarily upset that Herzog gave the Dengler character the bulk of the credit for planning and executing the escape from Laos. They insist that, in real life, these plans were already in the hopper before Dengler ever got to the camp. In fact, they say they waited a few weeks to tell him about the escape because they didn’t know if they could trust a guy with a German accent. DeBruin is also angry at Herzog’s depiction of his brother as an antagonist to Dengler, played by Davies as a “deranged and derelict Charles Manson type entity.” Schlussel adds fuel to *that* fire by pointing out that Davies played Manson in a 2004 TV movie. It’s clearly a conspiracy!

…Read more

FilmCouch #27

Paul Moore
By Paul Moore posted 1 year ago
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Origins of story: Interviewing Justin Evans about his new book soon to be a film, A Good and Happy Child. Rescue Dawn, Werner Herzog’s new movie opened this week starring Christian Bale. We interview actor Jeremy Davies and producer Harry Knapp. It’s the fictional portrayal of Dieter Dengler, the only man to escape a POW camp and be rescued during Vietnam. Herzog made a documentary on Dengler in 1997, Little Dieter Needs to Fly.

Download FilmCouch #27 or subscribe in the iTunes store (search for “filmcouch” or click here to launch iTunes) and a new free episode will download every Friday. Join the FilmCouch group

 
 Standard Podcast [27:32m]: Play Now | Download