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Documentaries are seen as primarily having a focus point. The recent "Inside job" is the strongest case for fact orientated film and probably deserved the Oscar on those grounds, a lightweight yet still meaty film which was about the one and only topic dawning on so many people-Money, the economy and all leading up to the corrupted banks. But when is enough. Many of these films never know just when to stop, not that they can't shut up but their yield point is higher than the average test of patience. As with "Cave of forgotten Dreams" the game has been turned upside down. Herzog has continued from Encounter at the end of the World, pushing even further the bar to breaking point; this is slow almost multi layered filmmaking with a director at the height of his craft pushing the envelope ,with a dilibreaty bizzare structure of loopy insanity, to the peak and then dropping us down in a swooning, stylish fashion. Where is the film going? Nobody, not even Herzog, knows.
Herzog takes us to his 12 year olds dreams, a cave so untouched by nature and locked off from the world that it might be out of this world, maybe even alien.35,000 years ago cave men travelled, worked maybe even lived in the Chauver-d'Arc,a cave in the south of France. The main aspect of the cave to Herzog is the cave paintings, a collection of engraved drawings of familiar animals-Horses, cattle, lions, panthers, Bears and even an unnoticed Hyena painted by artists some 35,000 years ago. Artists of that age continued for another 10,000 years perfecting the drawings adding to them, making them more distinct than they already were. But a collapse in the cave shut it off from humanity for life until a discovery in 1994.
We, as the audience, are giving a first glance at an otherwise unseen part of creation. We take the first steps into the cave in the same way as Herzog and his crew do. We step along a thin, metal walkway of a specially designed path through the cave. Everything is in pristine and untouched condition as if the markings were made only yesterday. What we feel is Herzog’s dismay on the path; we know that he is itching to walk on the other side of the path, the other side of the past. This doesn’t seem unusual from the maverick film maker; already known for showing us such topics as man against beast in "Grizzly Man" and man alongside nature with "Encounters at the end of the World". Forgotten Dreams is a collection of all those films but don’t be complacent in thinking this is a shoe string effort, this is an exemplary Herzogian effort. At one the film travels back to Nature. In the beginning the film establishes its ground in reality; we are giving a swooping crane shot from the ground and up into the sky as if to say this is where the dreams are seen before travelling off into an unknown dystopia. Symbolism to rich for you here, then you might as well give up as it’s about to travel into the bizarre.
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The film, for a documentary, is starkly offbeat. The film never has a traditional aim; there’s no investigatory journalism or secret government truths to be found. This is time, place, camera, action and strangely creating his purest and simplest film in what can be seen as his trilogy of documentaries. It’s also the reverse and deconstruction of the documentary. All Herzog is doing is observing what we see, it makes a fresh change from the norm, where documentary film makers don’t dare to just simply document what they see. But the film was never going to be safe with Herzog behind the camera and with lines such as “Are we truly the crocodiles who look back into the abyss of time” you know what you getting yourself into. It’s all done with a traditional stylistic pallet; it always helps when there maybe little going on to keep you engaged. But with only four hours to film each day in the cave you could forgive him if things are incoherent, rough, or choppy.But thats the rough and tumble,the wild excitement that you get when you are going into the darkness of the unknown,invading what possibly should never have been seen. It's described as if "they were staring right back at us".
Continuing on through the film and things do follow a more traditional path. Instead of Subtitles we are given dubbed soundtracks and interviews of the people in the field; even with such an idea every director needs a little help. But there is no encouragement made for Herzog to make a traditional film. Every interviewee is a character in a film that has a story to tell. There’s the archaeologist who worked in the circus, the perfume owner who sniffs out caves and the man in a cave man outfit playing a modern day version of the flute, performing a rendition of stars and stripes. And once the interviewing is done we are given one last tour in the cave; where his camera does all the talking. The final 20 minutes are illuminating, where Herzog just lets it all hang out; where the modern age of art meets where art began where a simple combination of picture, camera and an orchestral soundtrack come together in perfect harmony. Thhe person next to me perfectly summarises the last shot'as “relaxing”.
Herzog is in the end a story teller. He has the narrative backbone through the stories that we are told through the art, the characters with their rich back stories and the setting, a mysterious forgotten land that are eventful protagonists travel through to discover forgotten treasures. Cave of forgotten Dreams is the closest Herzog has ever come to remaking Indiana Jones.
***1/2****
LOW DOWN
Proof that all you need is a camera, some theatrical music and a cave and you get something far more meaningful than a documentary on the financial meltdown.Mysterious,creative and all guided by the only Herzog voiceover you will ever need to hear.