Tag Archives: werner-herzog

Fall into a Trance with the Trailer for Werner Herzog’s Cave of Forgotten Dreams

While Werner Herzog does narrate Cave of Forgotten Dreams , his 3-D documentary about the oldest-known man-made art in the Chauvet caves of Southern France, his voice-over is conspicuously absent from the first trailer. That’s probably just as well, because I’m not positive that I could resist falling asleep if Herzog’s soothing voice was paired with the sublime images presented here. At least not in 2-D.

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Fall into a Trance with the Trailer for Werner Herzog’s Cave of Forgotten Dreams

Werner Herzog’s 3D Cave Journey Leads Docs Premiering at TIFF

The Toronto International Film Festival just announced the line-up for its Real-to-Reel documentary slate as well as its experimental Wavelengths program, both of which could probably stake at least some claim to Werner Herzog’s 3D spelunking extravaganza. But the docs side has the world premiere, along with other new efforts by Errol Morris, Ondi Timoner, Alex Gibney, and a revealing look inside the studio with old-school Bruce Springsteen. Read on for the complete program.

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Werner Herzog’s 3D Cave Journey Leads Docs Premiering at TIFF

Nicolas Cage’s Bruce Lee Homage Cut From ‘Sorcerer’s Apprentice’

Director Jon Turteltaub let his star take him to ‘some wild places,’ but not all of them actually worked. By Eric Ditzian, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Nicolas Cage Photo: MTV News Oh, Nicolas Cage, you wonderfully wacky man! Who else has to tell a group of reporters that he honestly never hired a voodoo priestess to break a hex on a movie set? Who can start a conversation about irascible filmmaker Werner Herzog’s directorial style by saying, “Werner doesn’t really know a lot about jazz”? Who else could tell David Letterman a story about taking mushrooms with a cat named Louis? What would Hollywood (and those of us who write about it) do without Nic Cage? The town would be a much less compelling place, that’s for certain. Yet there is a flip side to the actor’s madcap worldview. As “Sorcerer’s Apprentice” director Jon Turteltaub told MTV News, a great majority of the ideas Cage brings to a set are simply too nutso to consider. “What’s a big percentage, 60? 70?” Turteltaub laughed. “Here’s the thing with Nic: Sometimes the ideas are completely insane and off-the-wall, but you still do them, because you can be wrong, and in the context of the film, you never know when it might actually be brilliant. “Nic made me promise before this movie that I would just let him lead me on a crazy adventure through this character,” added Turteltaub, who has also directed Cage in two “National Treasure” movies. “And I said, ‘OK, I’ll go there.’ He brought me to some wild places.” But one improvisatory moment in particular was just too weird to include in the final cut of “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice,” in which Cage stars as immortal magician Balthazar Blake, who does mystical battle against archenemy Maxim Horvath (Alfred Molina). The incident took place during a scene in which Balthazar and Horvath converge in an NYU public bathroom for a plasma-bolt-filled throwdown. “At one point, Nic went into a whole Bruce Lee routine,” Turteltaub said. “We were like, ‘Oh, that’s great. Do that more.’ Cut, cut. … It won’t be on the DVD!” Check out everything we’ve got on “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘The Sorcerer’s Apprentice’

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Nicolas Cage’s Bruce Lee Homage Cut From ‘Sorcerer’s Apprentice’

Next on the 3-D Bandwagon: Werner Herzog

Werner Herzog will reportedly join Martin Scorsese in the race to become the first internationally recognized auteur to adopt 3-D. More jaw-dropping still: The Bavarian master/raconteur/adventurer will use the technology on a documentary about cave paintings . “I can have only three people with me, and I can use only lights which must not create temperature,” Herzog said of the filming process. “For each shot, because the technology is not really advanced, we had to build [our] own camera from zero using a specific configuration of lenses and mirrors. We are doing something nobody has done with 3-D.” Sounds great! Not so great: The odds of finding an art-house theater that can project it. [ Roger Ebert via The Guardian ]

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Next on the 3-D Bandwagon: Werner Herzog

DVDerby: Your Weekly Guide to What’s New (and Good) on Video

If it’s Tuesday, it’s DVD /Blu-ray release day! Which new releases should you spend your hard earned disposable income on? Find out after the jump in DVD erby, Movieline’s compact guide to the hyper-competitive home-video field.

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DVDerby: Your Weekly Guide to What’s New (and Good) on Video

Werner Herzbag: The Voice Of A Plastic Bag

Werner Herzog is the voice of a lonely plastic bag, searching America for its maker. You can just let this play in the background as you do other things, and let his voice wash over you. The Best Links: Via Kottke Watch

Megaman Beanie

Put this beanie on and you will be forced to fight wave after wave of mechanized foe.

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Megaman Beanie

Werner Herzog Reads Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel

First Curious George , now Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel. Bed time is never going to be the same

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Werner Herzog Reads Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel

Werner Herzog Reads Curious George

German director Werner Herzog reads Curious George and gives his own slightly creepy, slightly disturbing and yet somehow funny interpretation of events. Contribute: Add an image, link, video or comment