Browsing Tag

documentary

TRAILER OF THE DAY – CAVE OF FORGOTTEN DREAMS

Cave Of Forgotten Dreams

Cave Of Forgotten Dreams

Positively received at its Toronto Festival Premiere, Cave of Forgotten Dreams shows the dramatic results of Werner Herzog’s exclusive access to the recently discovered Chauvet caves in the South of France, and their truly extraordinary cave paintings, dating back 32,000 years. Herzog’s use of 3D really brings these beautiful works of art and the breath-taking cathedral like cave with its towering stalagmites to life. Herzog uses his unique access to this treasure trove of Palaeolithic masterpieces to muse on the immensity and fragility of man’s progress.



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Herzog combines his gifts as a conjurer of unforgettable images, explorer of forbidden landscapes and poetic philosopher to illuminate and celebrate the earliest recorded visions of humanity. The Chauvet Cave, which contains the earliest known cave paintings, was discovered in 1994 and is considered one of the most significant prehistoric art sites. Hundreds of cave paintings depict at least thirteen different species, including horses, cattle, lions, panthers, bears, rhinos and even hyenas. The artists used techniques not often seen in other cave art making the Chauvet Cave an important record of Palaeolithic life in all of its savage detail.

Fear of damage from exposure to light and even human breath has meant that only a tiny handful of researchers have witnessed the paintings in person. Herzog finally managed to get permission to shoot there, with access strictly limited to a few hours per day and to a two foot wide walkway, using specially designed 3D cameras and battery-powered lights that emit no heat.With his long-time collaborator, Director of Photography Peter Zeitlinger, Herzog had to rebuild and design radical adaptations to the available 3D cameras, with specialized equipment shipped from both the United States and other parts of Europe. Overcoming other setbacks and complications, including a volcanic eruption, Herzog and his team endured several weeks of intense production in March and April 2010. This is third of his films produced by Erik Nelson and Creative Differences.

Werner Herzog has directed over 50 feature films, and has developed a strong reputation for his documentary feature work, including the Oscarâ-nominated Encounters at the End of the World, Grizzly Man, Burden of Dreams, Little Dieter Needs to Fly, and My Best Fiend.  His feature films include Aguirre: The Wrath of God, The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser (Grand Jury Prize, Cannes, 1974), Nosferatu, Fitzcarraldo (Best Director, Cannes, 1982), Rescue Dawn, and, most recently, Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans.

Due for release in 3D on 25th March, 2011 – keep your eyes peeled on Panic Dots for our review of this stunning documentary.

 

REVIEW: Catfish

Catfish Poster

Catfish Poster

It’s proving quite a challenge to write about Catfish without completely ruining it for the audience. Bearing that in mind, I’d like to let you know that I’m going to give it 5/5. If you intend on watching the film, and don’t want the experience compromised I would suggest that you stop reading now. Don’t even watch the trailer. Just go the cinema, completely blind, and drink it all in. Don’t even read this review!

Now, I’m going to show you a still from the film and carry on my review underneath. If you’re still here after that, then be warned: there will be some mild spoilers. Not huge ones, but spoilers none the less.

Nev With Megan Cutout - Catfish

Still here? You fools!

While Catfish is a documentary, it displays all the traits of a sharply written thriller. It was originally set up to document a year in the life of Yaniv “Nev” Schulman, a New York photographer who’s started a platonic online relationship with a child artist named Abby through Facebook. She’s taken to painting pictures recreating Nev’s dance photography stills. While he only communicates with Abby digitally,  he speaks to her mother Angela on the telephone and eventually starts talking to Abby’s older sister Megan. They find they have a lot in common – she’s a dancer, he’s a dance photographer, they both share a love of little sister Abby’s artwork – and, despite not having met each other, a digital romance starts to blossom between them.

That’s all I’m prepared to say regarding the documentary’s “plot”.

Nev looking out of car

The story that Catfish presents is very much of its time.  It’s an exploration of how social media and the internet have completely revolutionised the manner in which people interact with each other and how online identity can be moulded and shaped to suit the users needs. Directors Ariel Schulman and Henry Joost provide a running “online” theme throughout the film, using footage from Google maps and Facebook to set up scenarios and jump from scene to scene.

Nev, his older brother Ariel and their friend, and colleague Henry are very much the lead characters in this documentary, and while it would be easy to write them off as cynical New York hipsters, you find yourself empathising with them and eventually feeling touched by their compassion and understanding.

This documentary is for everyone who has ever been in love or used a Facebook account.

There were parts of Catfish where the story was so intense that I felt I couldn’t breathe, and there were parts that very nearly moved me to tears. I can not recommend it enough.

5/5

In UK Cinemas on 17th December 2010 released via Momentum Pictures.


The Buckfast Code – Full Doc

The Buckfast Code