Werner Herzog: Lessons of Darkness
- The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser
- aka Every Man for Himself and God Against All)
(Jeder für sich und Gott gegen alle - West Germany1974
- Werner Herzog
- 110 DCP
- NR
Screening Dates
- September 11, 2021 8:30
- September 17, 2021 6:15
- September 18, 2021 6:15
- September 20, 2021 8:35
“Kaspar Hauser is one of the most fascinating of films. At his best, Herzog is like no other filmmaker I know.”
Derek Malcolm, The Guardian
Werner Herzog’s fable-like follow-up to Aguirre, the Wrath of God remains one of his most beloved works. Dramatizing an intriguing and still-unsolved historical mystery, the film opens in 1828 in Nuremberg, where a strange man is found standing catatonically in the town square. He is Kaspar Hauser, perhaps the ultimate Herzogian outsider: without speech, without reason, without memory, and apparently without human contact since childhood. Initially treated as a freak, Kaspar is gradually educated in the ways of Western civilization, but his encounters with language, logic, and religion have unexpected results. Herzog employs off-kilter visuals to convey his feral protagonist’s disorientation, and heightens the sense of estrangement with the inspired casting of non-actor Bruno S., a street musician who had spent years in mental institutions, in the role. The film won three major prizes at Cannes in 1975. Bruno S. also starred in Herzog’s 1977 feature Stroszek.
Restoration courtesy of Shout! Factory and the American Genre Film Archive
“Mysterious and moving … Where others see freakshows, Werner Herzog finds poetry and wonder.”
David Calhoun, Time Out
“One of the more odd and affecting performances in Herzog’s movies—part guileless, part gimmicky, and all genuinely WTF. A bold experiment that paid off in a big way.”
David Fear, Pete Travers, Rolling Stone