On DVD: Encounters at the End of the World
Forget the cutesy penguins: Werner Herzog fires up our imagination and shows us what Antarctica is really like.
'Encounters at the End of the World' -
Image Entertainment
"The National Science Foundation had invited me to Antarctica -- even though I left no doubt that I would not come up with another film about penguins." -- Werner Herzog Forget everything you know about cute penguins searching for family values in a white wilderness. Encounters at the End of the World shows us what working and living in Antarctica is really like. Better yet, it's told through the keen eyes of Werner Herzog, the adventurer-filmmaker who made the classic Fitzcarraldo in the wilds of the Amazon. Herzog should also be considered an adventurer-philosopher, for he's as interested in the Why as he is the How of the scientific work being done at the South Pole. Encounters introduces us to a dozen fascinating people united by a common desire to step off the charted maps and into the unknown. Herzog begins his thoughtful narration by spelling out the reason he made Encounters. He saw some of the underwater footage taken beneath the Ross Ice Shelf by ice diver Henry Kaiser and was fascinated by its otherworldliness. The researchers at McMurdo and other camps live in an almost alien environment operating under different rules, like, for starters, the fact that the sun never sets for a number of months each year. Rather than bore us with statistics about the extreme weather conditions, Herzog takes us through the survival course given to visitors. To simulate the effects of a "white-out" blizzard, ten newbies are roped together with wastebaskets over their heads and asked to search for their instructor "lost" in the snow. Navigating by their instincts, the group goes off in a totally wrong direction and is soon completely fouled up. Since these people are by no means dummies, we wonder what kind of slip-up might result in turning us into a human icicle.
Genetic biologists study the DNA of one-celled creatures that build enormous tree-like colonies, using tentacle-like pseudopods to gather tiny bits of grit to form an exoskeleton around their vulnerable bodies. Werner Herzog notes that, when you really think about it, even these one-celled animals fulfill the basic definition of intelligent life.
Herzog finds that these explorers into the unknown are not cold pragmatists, but men and women with inquisitive, open minds. Physicists launch a helium balloon to detect and study neutrinos in a part of the sky far away from man-made electronic disturbances. The head researcher defines a neutrino as an almost spiritual thing. So far, a neutrino can be measured only by its effects, but not captured or observed directly.
Herzog uses staggeringly beautiful images of extreme nature to illustrate his personal opinions, as he did in the Fitzcarraldo documentary Burden of Dreams. In the older film Herzog unloaded a bitter, pessimistic tirade condemning the outwardly attractive Amazon jungle as a horrifying realm of beasts, insects, plants and microbes all battling and consuming one another. His opinions in Encounters are much more gentle but still a bit on the caustic side. Herzog marvels at the exploits of the colonial explorers of the early 20th century (we see ancient B&W clips) but frowns on their pointless and costly race to be the first to the pole. To further illustrate his point, we see footage of a professional Guinness Book of Records man who intends to pogo-stick his way to the South Pole, just to get his name on an official blotter. Herzog is not above interrupting a chatty interviewee with his own overdubbed voice, saying that the person went on forever and paraphrasing his speech into something shorter. He also seems determined to undermine the cultural obsession with cute penguins. He asks the local penguin expert if the birds sometimes go crazy or if there are any gay penguins. The answer is both yes and no. Some penguins just get their interior compasses mixed up; Herzog's camera catches one wrong-way waddler heading to the inland mountains instead of toward the water. The local rule is to not interfere, so the last time we see the bird, he's still marching toward certain doom.
Disc one also has five featurettes and a trailer. Under the Ice and Over the Ice assemble impressive outtakes backed by Kaiser's spacey music. They make excellent meditation videos. Dive Locker Interview: Werner Herzog Talks with Rob Robbins and Henry Kaiser is a lengthy interview with the station's dive master. The unseen Herzog asks for poetic statements about the science fiction-y environment below the ice, but Robbins keeps coming back with statements about practical underwater precautions. Slide Guitar & Exorcism @ The South Pole is a sort of "goof video" done by Kaiser during his first Antarctic visit in 2001. He uses a South Pole marker to play a slide guitar "around the world". Then the video shifts to a crazy party/ritual event in the engineering spaces, where a bearded technician "exorcises" the camp's ice-tunneling tractor. Much music and frivolity follow. A final featurette Seals & Men is a brief peek at some friendly-looking seals lounging on the ice. Off by itself on the second disc, director Jonathan Demme interviews Werner Herzog before an approving audience. Demme has just seen Encounters and praises it to the heavens. The two work up a friendly enthusiasm for the filmmaking game and show their appreciation for critic Roger Ebert, who receives a dedication title on Herzog's film. We hear about the director's childhood in Bavaria and his adventures on those jungle movies with the wild man Klaus Kinski. Herzog also tells us that the sub-ice pack diving footage also inspired his free-form science-fiction pastiche The Wild Blue Yonder. The discussion becomes so spirited that an announcer finally has to intercede and break it off. The always-interesting Herzog makes the interview the highlight of the disc's extras.
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