The journey of these people was made under brutally inhospitable conditions, and many were injured or died on the boat in an effort to start a new life. The journey, as taxing as it is, hold more of a promise and a brighter light for their futures that they are willing to endure it. This doctor devoted his time to not only helping these people, but also to influence others to do the same. This documentary accurately depicts his emotion and devotion in his mission and to these people with its up close shots and heartfelt testimony without seeming like his responses are tailored to fit an agenda. His vivid descriptions with the pictures on his computer monitor makes it feel like the viewer is actually in his office being motivated to help these people by the hard facts that the doctor is educating the viewer about.
Tag Archives: documentary
What Is Real?
Them! Us!
I chose these two stills because they represent a common theme throughout the documentary. Climate change and evolution, down to a molecular and single celled level is constantly discussed. In the first still, the science fiction movie they are watching is dealing with evolved creatures that are now taking over the world. Much like the science fiction movie they are watching, life not visible to the naked eye is doing just that. Herzog really gets the viewer thinking about how we as humans evolved from single celled organisms and in the second still, the scientists discuss how this single celled organism is actually demonstrating intelligent processes by separating and gathering grains of sand to protect its flimsy body by forming a rigid exoskeleton. Herzog’s open ended questions to experts on the topics they are discussing leave much up to vivid interpretation by the viewer and is much more interesting to watch than a cut and dried, scripted documentary. The comparisons between the science fiction and the wild, undisturbed wilderness and vast expanses of underwater scenery place the viewer in a position to really start to question their existence and the reasons for our day to day actions and choices in life.
The Fear Of The Unknown
I choose these two clips because I love how it really ties into the theme of science fiction and with science fiction films, it is to explore the unknown. And that is exactly what Werner Herzog did with his documentary. The first clip shows the creatures that the scientist find deep in the sea and the music with it is some what eerie, as if all the creatures from a science fiction came to life. Then the next clip shows the scientists watching an actual science fiction film. And as someone who really loves film, especially Quentin Tarantino, then you would know that any film he puts inside his films have meaning to it and makes that specific scene important. I really like how a documentary like this makes us question about things in life and ourselves when typically they are to inform and tell us what is right and wrong. But not with Herzog, he brings us into the unknown and heightens our fears and fantasies of what the possibilities could be or mean to the audience. He really brings fiction and non-fiction together and it is up to us whether to believe what we see. Just like these two scenes. Is the first clip we saw from a science fiction film…maybe the one the scientists were watching? Or, is what we really see true?
Human or Animal?
Inhuman Encounters at the End of the World
These images exemplify a common theme weaved throughout Werner Herzog’s film Encounters at the End of the World. The theme is searching for humanity in an inhuman place. Herzog believes such humanity exists and he attempts to reveal it in Antarctica by focusing on the people that visit the McMurdo station rather than the frozen wild itself. However, a closer look at his work reveals the reality of the situation; humanity cannot be found in an inhuman world. These two stills demonstrate that reality.
The top still arrives early in the film when Herzog visits seal scientists stationed outside of McMurdo. Here the scientists press their ears to the ice to listen for seal calls while an extradiegetic recording of the calls plays in the background. The second still comes later in the film when Herzog visits other biologists at a dive station. Here, a professional diver pivots to face the camera as he ascends beneath the ice. With these shots, Herzog juxtaposes the familiar, the human, with the unfamiliar, the Antarctic wild. He finds the humans in an inhuman place. However, color, clothing and shot composition in these stills expose the people’s inhuman-ness and their misplacement in this setting.
Tones of blue engulf the people in each shot, suggesting their domination by the cold environment. The people’s own hues of black and red stand out against the elements, alerting the viewer to their misplacement. Further, both shots depict quasi-human figures. Antarctic gear obscures their bodies and faces so that only their silhouettes are distinguishable as human. This costuming, so to speak, suggests that human penetration of an inhuman world warps the human, so that she or he becomes unrecognizable. This warping points to the idea that humanity cannot be naturally found in a place such as Antarctica.
Finally, there is something to be said about the shot composition of these stills. It is impeccable, and therefore uncanny. Herzog is only too familiar with cinematographic techniques such as obeying the rule thirds and working with depth of field. In the first shot, he places the horizon in the upper third of the frame, places the people in each lateral third of the frame, and adds depth to the image by placing figures in the foreground and background. The second shot, though not taken by Herzog, symmetrically positions the diver with his arms and head occupying the lateral thirds of the frame, and with two lines in the ice running symmetrically toward his shoulders. These manipulations of shot composition superficially work to conflate the people with their surroundings. The aesthetics are somewhat harmonizing and are suggestive of the people’s rightful place in Antarctic. However, it is precisely this manipulation that renders the shots uncanny. They are too perfect. The composition actually exposes the staged-ness of the shots, reminding the viewer of the unnatural presence of people in this world. Though Herzog finds humans in an inhuman place, his film highlights the idea that they should not be there.