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DVD
Reviews
Signs of Life/
Land of Silence and Darkness
Dir. Werner Herzog, 1968/ 1971, West Germany
New Yorker Video, $29.95 Few
filmmakers owe quite so much to the ascent
of DVD as Werner Herzog. Six years ago the
New German Cinema lion’s reputation was
in bad shape; when Michael Atkinson wrote
a great, personal appreciation of the director
for Film Comment in early 2000, one
had the distinct impression that the author
was trying to resuscitate an out-of-fashion
oeuvre. I was in school at the time, curious
about Herzog, and the amount of serious
writing I was able to dredge up on him was
negligible. By then he wasn’t afforded much
more status than cult novelty, a dubiously
motivated, decadent, self-styled madman
with an affinity for carny types, only slightly
more worthy of study than, say, Alexandro
Jodorowsky.
Herzog’s turn of fortune from curator/director
of anomalous art brut to petrified
Auteur Persona timed up nicely with the
downhill journey of the riverboat in his
1983 Fitzcarraldo and its myth-making
companion piece, Les Blank’s behind-the-scenes
Burden of Dreams. Compared to Herzog’s
early work, it’s obvious that something
had gone lost as the director himself had
been pushed to the forefront and become
his own subject. A once-intuitive imagistic
imagination was gone dull with polish; Herzog
was over-articulating, growing reverent
of beauty that he’d once indelibly tossed-out.
His gypsy backstory, a legend-wreathed delight
to early admirer Manny Farber, seemed more
cannily eccentric with each ad nauseum repetition
of the same handful of anecdotes and sartorial
affectations: the first phone call at 17,
the epic walking tours, the notebooks filled
with microscopic handwriting, the stolen
35mm camera (and all the arrogance of vision
it implies)… It was as much as suggested
that, by the time Robin Williams trod across
Werner’s face in What Dreams May Come,
a death knell was sounding.
This all changed when, later in 2000, roughly
coinciding with the release of the director’s
likable, if distinctly throwback Greatest
Hits reel My Best Fiend, Anchor Bay
Entertainment began rolling out Herzog’s
body of work on DVD. His return to fiction
film, the woeful Invincible, as good
as proved that that something remained
missing, but this was just one niggling
flop in an overall reversal of fortune—at
present Herzog has a new-ish Faber & Faber
interview collection and a coffee table
photo book to his name, and one of his three
new docs, Grizzly Man, sitting at
the very top of the metacritic scale.
New Yorker DVD, finishing the job for Anchor
Bay, now allows us to consider some of Herzog’s
early work with fresh eyes upon the disc
premiere of the director’s first feature
film, Signs of Life, and his most
essential documentary, Land of Silence
and Darkness. It’s a not-to-be-missed
opportunity to not just watch these films,
but to imagine just how strange they must’ve
looked 35 years ago, before generations
of cinephiles had lofted Herzog and his
Munich peers into the familiarity of the
pantheon. Signs of Life is a singular,
sundazed movie that jackknifes an hour in
on an obscure outburst of insanity. WWII:
a cache of three German soldiers are assigned
to oversee a munitions depot in a white,
desiccant fortress on the occupied Greek
island of Kos. The first we meet, the closest
the movie has to a star, is the recuperating
Stroszek (Swiss actor Peter Brogle), quiet
and intent, but with a flare-nosed hobgoblin
quality lying just under the surface.
The movie’s first hour is literally “about”
slack days of torpid motion and trivial
amusements: scratching bare, sunburned feet
in dry dirt, hypnotizing a chicken with
a piece of chalk (the same scene recurs
in Herzog’s Kasper Hauser), building
a better roach-trap. It’s an uncommonly
lovely film of digressions, built on a fascination
with paralytic Mediterranean sunshine and
the scattered bloomings of Stavros Xarhakos’s
score. The unnarrative template for Claire
Denis’s Foreign Legion minutiae-epic Beau
Travail is here, as is a model for Denis’s
willingness to improv into wherever un-obvious
beauty leads the film: Brogle’s head, in
profile, against a nighttime sea, a citadel
flooded by weeds and wildflowers, the steady
thrumming drone of the insects…
Stroszek is, with no fuss of explanation,
lost to madness and the movie, gradually
scaled back to become a blip in the landscape—then
nothing, installed invisibly by a miniature
coup as the fortresses’ scurrying one-man
army, launching a useless war against humanity.
Scenes of fretting Nazi commandants back
in the city are all dead air, but the lovely
rebellion of a sally of daytime fireworks
as good as announces the film as the arrival
of a major talent.
Though Signs of Life’s hero recedes
long before the final reel, Land of Silence
and Darkness has a wonderfully huddled
quality throughout with its subjects, the
blind-deaf. The film’s starting point is
Municher Fini Straubinger, a fiftysomething
woman who’s lost her sight and hearing as
the result of a terrific fall taken in her
teens. With her upright bourgeoisie bearing
and clutch of pearls, she could almost make
a Marx Brothers’ dowager, but the diligence
of her mission, if absurd, is nothing funny.
She travels Germany, making contact with
the similarly disabled, working tirelessly
to alleviate, through muddled contact, the
terrible sense of isolation that comes from
the absence of vital senses—as much to temper
her own loneliness, one suspects, as that
of the lost-to-the-world country bumpkins
she visits.
Though Herzog never lapses into easy reverence
of holy fools and wild children, there is
much to think on in the contrast between
the documentation of Ms. Straubinger’s constant
tread toward contact with a remembered world
and the footage from a school for born blind-deaf
children, or of those rural afflicted who’ve
long ago lost any capacity for communication.
For Fini, whose bedrock of measured grammar
and middle-class values remains intact,
her condition is a fate-ordained asceticism,
but 29-year-old born blind-deaf Vladmir
Kokol, never touched by education, simply
drifts in a fog of unmediated sensation,
battering his face with a ball and sqealching
his lips like a chimp. Happy? Maybe. I remember
a friend of mine who’d been a janitor at
a home for the deaf talking about the unearthly
noises that would come up at night when
the residents were having sex: “I never
realized how much we must hold back!” But
when Herzog’s camera hangs on to the reverence
of an old blind-deaf man lost in the texture
of a stumbled-onto tree trunk, I don’t think
the implication is that lack or ignorance
is really bliss—just very, very different.
One of the school’s teachers discusses the
difficulty of imparting abstract moral lessons
to the children—“good” and “evil” are boiled
down to “helping” or “hitting,” by which
definition I think that Silence and Darkness
is a good movie; there’s not a trace of
put-on to its steady empathy. What a blessing
is a truly curious camera; what an abomination
one that wants to tell us everything. The
film’s sense of inquiry will help me to
remember its faces: unself-conscious, haloed
by the windows of dark rooms, fogged eyes
drifting—Herzog’s famous landscapes give
way to an intent, close search for unguess-able
inner terrains.
New Yorker has never distinguished itself
as a company to deliver anything but the
leanest of home video packages, and this
is no exception—only Signs of Life
has any frills to speak of, in the form
of a Herzog commentary shared with doofus
straight man Norman Hill, his partner in
prior Anchor Bay disc tracks. There are
a few unfortunately precise answers to Hill’s
squeezed metaphors and inquiries (“The difference
between insecticide and genocide is only
a little step”), but largely Herzog manages
to gracefully defer answering questions
like “What is it that pushes Stroszek over
the top?” His ego more-or-less reined in,
or at least feeling justified here, the
old man even has moments of fine insight.
At a time when so many movies recall only
each other, leaving us primed to watch something
else “that reminded me of” as soon as the
credits roll, the point of entry that Herzog
offers to his work is vital. They “originated
out of real life.” Like only a handful of
filmmakers—Lumière, Pialat—these are movies
that end and leave us eager for the frightful,
fascinating world.
—NICK PINKERTON
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