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is his personal favorite, he explains “You can’t speak of favorite movies. You wouldn’t ask a father, ‘Which one is your favorite child?’ Of course, “Fitzcarraldo” is close to my heart. It’s not only just a movie, it’s really my life.” |
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reasoning for the procedure. “The question at the time was, whether we should do what you call the ‘plastic-solution’. We could have pulled a miniature plastic boat over a studio hill or somewhere in a botanic garden, pretending this was a real ship in the jungle. I always had the feeling that audiences should be back to where they trust their own eyes again.” |
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His concern for integrity and to keep the movie magic alive was ultimately the flame that kept him, his cast and his crew going as they spent weeks in the jungle, trying to achieve the impossible themselves. To get away from the overly special effects driven approach of modern filmmaking, Herzog decided to go the extra mile to gratify audiences, and the pay off in the movie is immense. |
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Ultimately the two have had a common denominator. Their similar integrity and their ferocity that forced them to push themselves to limits no one else was willing to follow them to. “I owe Klaus Kinski a lot, even though it was a nightmare to work with him day after day after day,” Herzog remembers the actor with a smile. “But that really doesn’t count any more, because what counts is what we have got on screen - the result. Kinski was only part of it, because I have done other films without him in it, like ‘The Mystery of Kaspar Hauser’, or ‘Stroszek’, or many others. I’ve done more than 40 films by now. I think there is something inside of me that pushes to such limits and pushes to such vitality. I don’t know exactly what it is and we should not speculate. Let’s take the films as they are.” |
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“To me it’s like a child,” Herzog elaborates thoughtfully and brings forth a very suitable comparison. “Once it is born, you just don’t tinker with it any more. You give it a chance for life, and do the best you can so its going to grow up the way it has to be, and the way it wants to be. Eventually it will develop its own energy and its own shape, and that’s exactly what happens to movies that we put out.” |
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“In my case there is a strong element of myself in all my films,” he explains his working methods. “I always write my own screenplays, I always direct my own films and I always produce my films. That gives some sort of coherence, and I don’t have to fulfill the needs of other people. I don’t get grumpy about a writer who has written a stupid scene, and is touchy about altering it when you as the director see it doesn’t work while shooting it. After four repetitions I know there’s something wrong with the writer - and that writer is me!” |
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Guido Henkel |
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© 1997-99 by “DVD Review”. All rights reserved. |
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