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| light reduction is a big problem with 3D which is a bit of a disaster for a 3D film set in a cave. |
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All this is a preface to a disappointed review of Cave. It’s a decent enough documentary but it is not up to Herzog’s usual high standards. It’s pretty obvious that Herzog just didn’t have enough material for a feature film about the Chauvet Cave and had to scurry to fill the time with archaeological finds from other caves in France and other digs in Germany, Switzerland and elsewhere. Herzog’s quirky style doesn’t really fit this material, which attempts to be a forensic documentary and at the same time a humorous look at the scientists investigating the cave. He doesn't commit to either scheme very seriously. Herzog did this sort of thing so much better in the superior documentary Encounters At The End of the World about scientists in the Antarctic - which is a must see, as is Grizzly Man, Herzog’s film about the late self styled bear whisperer Timothy Treadwell. Other recentish Herzog documentaries I'd recommend are: Little Dieter Needs To Fly, Wings of Hope and My Best Fiend which can be watched on YouTube, Google Video or, of course, DVD. Herzog's upcoming film about inmates on Death Row looks much more interesting.
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I really wanted to like Cave of Forgotten Dreams but I got bored in the middle portion and the loud angelic choirs and the camerawork eventually started to make me feel a bit nauseous. The 3D filming made the film much worse than it needed to be, indeed it is a particularly inappropriate technique for a film set inside a dark chamber. The fact that Herzog wasn’t allowed to use arc lamps, coupled with the light reduction caused by the silly 3D glasses meant that the film was very hard to see. 2D would have been better for this movie and I'm sure when I see it in 2D I will like it more. 3D as a concept is probably a busted flush: it’s a gimmick and the gimmick is wearing off again just as it did in the 1950’s and 70’s. Only teenagers and greedy executives like 3D, not adults or indeed, in my experience, young children.

18 comments:
I don't like 3D. It does my head in. Its an optical illusion that annoys our brains. My mate has 3D TV, can't wait to watch the Worlds Biggest Fattie in 3D..Wahoo! What do you think of Brighton Rock new film? I liked it.
I have to say that I pretty much agree with you on this, wanting to like it better than I did and being distracted by the 3D glasses. I mean, I'm glad somebody filmed the caves, but I don't know that it necessarily had to be him.
The alligators at the end were an interesting touch, although I am not really sure why they were in there.
I didn't see his latest, 'Into the Abyss' at the film festival, but I think it's gotten good reviews.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/video/2011/sep/09/werner-herzog-into-the-abyss
Frankie
All the 3D films I have seen so far have given me headaches.
Havent seen the new Brighton Rock yet.
Seana
I think the alligator bit was just Herzog being silly, but the tone of that bit didnt quite mesh with the rest of the doc. In fact the whole thing didnt quite mesh.
Matt
Yeah that could be really interesting. I'm looking forward to that one. But then I was looking forward to Cave too.
aaah, come on, there's more than six of us. Definitely!
Genevieve, actually I was thinking he might have delusions of grandeur. Declan Burke only posits three.
Gen
Well maybe ten then!
Seana
I know for a fact that Dec's blog is a real hub for crime fiction fans. Dec's, Peter's, Sarah Weinmann's and a few others are THE places to be.
I know for a fact Sarah Weinman hasn't posted in nine months. Stop winging it and try and keep up, Adrian!
Anon
Really?
Yeah...actually she's never been one of my go-to places to be honest. I just kind of assumed she was still a hub.
I know both he and you underestimate considerably, but if he thinks three then he's never going to be disappointed.
Your blog is quite the hub too, but it's a different kind of hub.
I like having both kinds in my life.
Seana
I think Dec and Peter are more solidly committed to crime fiction than I am. It makes up some of my reading but maybe only about 10 percent.
If you ask me life is just too short to spend it trying to plough through The Girl Who Kicked The Hornets' Nest for example.
I'm not sure either of them plowed through that one either.
I've been doing the mystery section in the store for a long time, but it really irks me when people think that's the only thing I read, or call me things like 'the mystery lady'. It also bugs me when people somehow think that I would somehow have read all of the books in that section. As you say, life is too short.
Seana
What is that the science fiction writer Ted Sturgeon says "90 percent of everything is rubbish"
I think it would be soul destroying to read all that stuff.
I think also that might be why actors - like Steven Weber - make such poor polemicists: can you imagine how shot their brains must be having had them filled with so many bad lines from bad TV shows.
It's kind of odd working in a bookstore, because of course you haven't read everything that's up for conversation, but many people assume that you have. I find it more with contemporary popular fiction like The Help or Cutting for Stone, or whatever is up at the moment. Sometimes I just haven't gotten to it, but sometimes I get a real vibe off something that makes me think, never in a million years, and it's hard to not just come out with that when they seem to want your validation.
Don't get me wrong, I am almost always happy when people have latched on to something they really like, but I do really balk at having to give things I haven't and probably won't read my tacit endorsement.
Seana
I've found that if its on the NYT fiction bestseller list it doesnt automatically mean that its rubbish but it is usually a strong sign that its not going to be my cup of tea.
The non fiction best seller lists are sometimes a little more predictive of my tastes.
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