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Eroberung des Nutzlosen (2004)

von Werner Herzog

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299887,766 (4.17)14
"Hypnotic....It is ever tempting to try to fathom his restless spirit and his determination to challenge fate." --Janet Maslin, New York Times   Werner Herzog (Grizzly Man) is one of the most revered and enigmatic filmmakers of our time, and Fitzcarraldo is one of his most honored and admired films. More than just Herzog's journal of the making of the monumental, problematical motion picture, which involved, among other things, major cast changes and reshoots, and the hauling (without the use of special effects) of a 360-ton steamship over a mountain , Conquest of the Useless is  a work of art unto itself, an Amazonian fever dream that emerged from the delirium of the jungle. With fascinating observations about crew and players--including Herzog's lead, the somewhat demented internationally renowned star Klaus Kinski--and breathtaking insights into the filmmaking process that are uniquely Werner Herzog, Conquest of the Useless is an eye-opening look into the mind of a cinematic master.… (mehr)
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Wild dreamscape and from an earlier time. ( )
  Mithril | Mar 23, 2022 |
> Babelio : https://www.babelio.com/livres/Nail-Passang-le-passeur-de-bonheur/665892

> Bien plus qu'un roman, une histoire passionnante qui donne de fabuleuses clés pour progresser sur le chemin de l'éveil.
Après l'avoir lu une première fois, j'ai hâte de m'y replonger afin de mettre en pratique les conseils qui y sont prodigués.
Un livre à ajouter à sa bibliothèque, à lire et relire.
Danieljean (Babelio) ( )
  Joop-le-philosophe | Feb 18, 2021 |
Compelled to update this because I am quoting it in something else:

"Nature has come to her senses again; only the forest is still menacing, motionless. The river rolls along without a sound, a monster. Night falls very fast, with the last birds scolding the evening, as always at this hour. Rough cawing, malevolent sounds, punctuated by the even chirping of the first cicadas. From all this working in the rain my fingers are wrinkly, like those of the laundresses. I must have a hundred bites on my back from some insect I never did see; all of me is rotting with moisture. I’d be grateful if it were only dreams tormenting me. Across the table came a strange primeval insect, with a thin, lance-like, excessively long proboscis and feelers on both sides. I couldn’t make out any eyes. It was dragging a dead insect of the same species, and disappeared through the cracks in the bark floor. Then caterpillars crawled toward me from all directions, brainless but unstoppable. I thought intensely of the great moment when I showed my son, five at the time, the mountains of the moon through a telescope." ( )
1 abstimmen uncleflannery | May 16, 2020 |
Conquest of the Useless is pure prose poetry and probably the best book about the jungle I've ever read. Before reading it I was already familiar with the film and the documentary Burden of Dreams, about the making of the film, which is required background before reading this book.

Conquest of the Useless reads like a fever dream. Although about the film, the main character is the jungle. It's written in diary format with some days taking up only a single line. There's no narrative but rather flashes of incident. What makes it so amazing are Herzog's trademark non sequitur's which weigh with unspoken significance. Scenes appear without context as part of the fabric of the jungle and it's dreamy obscenity of life and death. The book has many rewards and is hugely generous but will require patience. It took months for me to complete, I could only read small amounts at a time, when the mood was right, leaving scores of pages underlined. A great work of art in its own right. ( )
1 abstimmen Stbalbach | Jan 28, 2013 |
What writing style fits mad endeavors? What format functions well to relate chaos? After finishing “Conquest of the useless: reflections from the making of Fitzcarraldo”, I came to the conclusion that it must be the journal, or at least the journal of such a genius as is the film director Werner Herzog.

Most of us are acquainted with Herzog and his stupendous movies. Aguirre, Nosferatu, Cobra Verde and more recently Bad Lieutenant, are part of our collective film-o-graphic memory. And although the German moviemaker’s reputation has in the past decades slowly moved from pure Art house to that silver lining of mainstream appreciation, there is no doubt that he will never be of the boring mass. Iguanas and jiving dead bodies are just not everyone’s cup of tea.

Herzog is both the last and the apex of a generation of moviemakers who forsake the studios to go out in the world to capture both the truth and a poignant story. No gimmicks, no card board settings, no digital corrections or mock – up’s. Only true images, true settings and true emotions. For what is less known to the larger public is that Herzog is a documentary maker first. It is well worth to get out of your couch to get a view of such reportages as “The great ecstasy of woodcarver Steiner”, “Bells from the deep” or “Grizzly Man” to understand how Herzog creates his movies both in his inner eye and on the silver screen.

In “Fitzcarraldo”, starring the infamous Klaus Kinsky and the lovely Claudia Cardinale, Herzog recounts the story of Brian Fitzgerald, an obsessed Opera lover whose dream it is to build an Opera House in the middle of the Amazon jungle. To acquire the necessary funds, Fitzgerald develops a business scheme which should bring him a fortune: he plans to bypass the dangerous Pongo de Mainique rapids on the Peruvian Urubamba river, who hamper a shipping liaison between Manaus and the Rubber fields, by hauling a boat over land to another nearby free flowing river. Ambitious enough, but unfortunately the only suitable small strip of land over which the ship has to be moved is not only primeval jungle but also a steep hill.

Fitzcaraldo, as the Indians call him, will embark on his impossible enterprise, and with a monomaniacal rage tear his boat over the jungle mountain. A work of immense folly, requiring unprecedented resources and even human sacrifices. All for the sake of Opera. Art has effectively replaced God in this man’s mind.

Now to capture realistically on film what his main personage wants to do, Herzog has no other option than…to pull a ship over a jungle mountain in the middle of the Amazon.

With poor financial backing, filming in the middle of the jungle, in a region on the brink of war, with hundreds of unruly indigenous extras, huge engineering challenges, sickness, accidents, floods and revolting and mad actors, Herzog films his movie

And while Herzog’s endeavor appears to be as monomaniacal as Fitzcarraldo, it is his journal which shows the truth.

The journal appears to be a real journal with numerous dated entries. Each entry describes something Herzog witnesses. Images, micro-scenes. A spider for instance.
A spider big as a hand, hidden in his shoe, feeling like a sock. Or a dying kitten, attacked by chicken, half –eaten by the chicken. A dead child. A sad mongrel of a dog. A woman nursing a pig, a woman nursing a dog. A drown man. A drown man washed out of his shallow grave by the rising river. A drunk man lying on the ground, a drunk woman sprawled on the ground showing her private parts. Mud. Rain. Heat. The river rising, the river dropping, “click”. A freed Anaconda slipping into the grass. “click”. Another frame “click” and another frame.
Werner Herzog thinks in pictures, in images, in “Bilder”. You imagine him framing the scenery between his hands, thumbs and indexes touching. Click, camera switched on, recording. He said it. “Ich woltte dabei sein”, I wanted to be there “mit eine Kamera”.

Images, like cinema stills, framed realities jotted down in his journal, a whole book full, page after hallucinating page. Herzog is a visual artist, he thinks, dreams, fantasizes in pictures, cinematic stills, nearly no movement, just a bit, to show it is real, details, his eyes catches details, details which hide heart-breaking stories, hint at parables expose worlds…

Images, not stories is how I remember all his movies. The Bat flying towards us in “Nosferatu”; the rats in the street in the same movie; Aguirre standing on his raft, chasing the small apes; A boat in the jungle, pulled over a mountain. A man standing with his back to an approaching bear. An iguana. Kaspar, the abused mystery child, exposed at the market. The ecstatic open mouth of the ski-jumper Walter Steiner…The narrative, if any, is forgotten. Images remain.

Aguirre, my first Herzog movie, seen with my Dad in a small cinema in Ivory Coast. I was thirteen year old. An epiphany. A receptivity for Art awakened. An understanding; a connection with the Artist. No need for story…images, just images… the brown flowing river, the forbidding shore of the jungle that slips by, the abandoned villages…the trapped conquistador. The movie touched a nerve. Even that young I recognized that river, that Amazon jungle, that erotic exuberance of Life. I’ve been there, I have seen it, felt it. I understood Herzog’s movie in a way which was surely beyond my age.

Werner Herzog, inheritor of Lotte Eisner’s demonic genius…His journal like a pointillist painting, every entry a dot, a speck on a large canvas that slowly emerges, a canvas depicting human folly, inhuman endeavor and a master – director, icy calm amidst a mayhem and a chaos, he is directing in the name of his Art.

What a book ! What a man ! ( )
8 abstimmen Macumbeira | Oct 6, 2012 |
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Fitzcarraldo: Auf den Koch Ihrer Hunde! Auf Verdi! Auf Rossini! Auf Caruso!
- Don Araujo: Auf Fitzcarraldo, den Eroberer des Nutzlosen! - Fitzcarraldo: So wahr ich vor Ihnen stehe, werde ich eines Tages große Oper in den Urwald bringen! Ich bin...in der Überzahl! Ich bin die Milliarden! Ich bin das Schauspiel im Wald! Ich bin der Erfinder des Kautschuk! Durch mich wird Kautschuk erst zum Wort! (Dialog aus dem Film "Fitzcarraldo")
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Wie bei der irrwitzigen Wut eines Hundes, der sich in das Bein eines bereits toten Rehs verbissen hat und an dem erlegten Wild rüttelt und zerrt, so daß der Jäger ihn zu beruhigen aufgibt, hatte sich in mir eine Vision festgekrallt, das Bild von einem großen Dampfschiff über einem Berg - das Schiff unter Dampf sich aus eigener Kraft einen steilen Hang im Dschungel hinaufwindend, und über einer Natur, die die Wehleidigen und die Starken gleichermaßen vernichtet, die Stimme Carusos, die allen Schmerz und alles Schreien der Tiere aus dem Urwald zum Verstummen bringt und den Gesang der Vögel verlöscht.
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Eine Feindseligkeit kam bei einem Teil der Versammlung auf, die ich bisher nur aus Berichten früher Seefahrer kannte, nur dass die Eingeborenen T-Shirts mit "John Travolta fever" und "Disneyland" trugen.
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"Hypnotic....It is ever tempting to try to fathom his restless spirit and his determination to challenge fate." --Janet Maslin, New York Times   Werner Herzog (Grizzly Man) is one of the most revered and enigmatic filmmakers of our time, and Fitzcarraldo is one of his most honored and admired films. More than just Herzog's journal of the making of the monumental, problematical motion picture, which involved, among other things, major cast changes and reshoots, and the hauling (without the use of special effects) of a 360-ton steamship over a mountain , Conquest of the Useless is  a work of art unto itself, an Amazonian fever dream that emerged from the delirium of the jungle. With fascinating observations about crew and players--including Herzog's lead, the somewhat demented internationally renowned star Klaus Kinski--and breathtaking insights into the filmmaking process that are uniquely Werner Herzog, Conquest of the Useless is an eye-opening look into the mind of a cinematic master.

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