Encounters At The End Of The World __top__ Online
The origins of Encounters at the End of the World lie in Herzog's explicit rejection of mainstream nature filmmaking. Invited to Antarctica by the National Science Foundation, Herzog accepted on one condition: he would not make another film like March of the Penguins .
Encounters at the End of the world movie review - Roger Ebert Encounters at the End of the World
Unidentified, microscopic organisms thriving in sub-zero temperatures. The origins of Encounters at the End of
Then there is the linguist. Herzog meets a man who once studied languages — who watched as one of the world’s languages died, a language spoken by only a handful of people. The man admits, with a shrug, that he did not really care. Herzog is clearly appalled. As the critic Roger Ebert noted, the film gets “quite un-Herzogian” in this sequence: the director refuses to let this man speak for himself, cutting him off mid-sentence with voice-over. For Herzog, a man who has devoted his life to the languages of the world — who sees language as the life-force that struggles against our ongoing demise — this indifference to extinction, even the extinction of a single tongue, is unforgivable. Then there is the linguist