From: bburne...@austin.rr.com 
Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2011 11:13 AM
To: Bob Burnett 
Subject: Cave of Forgotten Dreams




Here’s a review. And count me in. BB

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Do They Dream? Spelunking With Werner Herzog
Stuart Klawans | April 27, 2011
Hyperbole fails. “A movie 30,000 years in the making! Goes where no film has 
gone before—or will ever go again! Mysteries and wonders leap off the screen! 
In a lifetime of moviegoing, you will never see another film like this!” Such 
ravings become mere statements of fact with Werner Herzog’s Cave of Forgotten 
Dreams, a documentary that demotes cries of “Awesome!” to the status of mere 
reportage. The proposition, quite literally, is this: you can pay your money, 
strap on your 3-D glasses (yes, 3-D) and witness what Herzog alone has been 
entrusted to show you, or else forgo seeing the most primal and profound 
evidence yet encountered of what makes us human.

That evidence lies buried in the cliffs overlooking the Ardèche River in 
southern France, where in 1994 a trio of spelunkers pushed their way through a 
crevice in the rock face and found the oldest known cave paintings in the 
world. The walls of the site, now named Chauvet Cave in honor of one of its 
discoverers, are covered with hundreds of images of animals, which most 
archaeologists believe to be approximately 30,000 years old. There is some 
debate; but no one doubts that the paintings are almost pristine, the mouth of 
the cave having been sealed by a rockfall ages ago. To make sure that the 
condition of the paintings remains stable, the entrance has been resealed, this 
time by a steel bank-vault door. Small research teams and their highly select 
guests enter the cave for only six weeks during the year, breaking up their 
time to avoid letting too much body heat and moisture build up. No other people 
are permitted beyond the steel door—except for Herzog and a skeleton crew, who 
received permission from the French Ministry of Culture to film in Chauvet Cave 
in the spring of 2010.

Some details of Herzog’s experience during the shoot are unavoidably worked 
into Cave of Forgotten Dreams, since passages through Chauvet Cave are cramped, 
and everyone must remain on a narrow steel walkway that the researchers have 
laid down. The crew members, with their battery belts and flat lights, could 
not help getting into the shots. This was only fitting; people who come to 
Chauvet Cave to explore someone else’s form of image-making do well to 
acknowledge their own. But Herzog also incorporates voluntary self-revelations. 
He chooses to narrate the film in voiceover and to make his presence felt 
during interviews. And the presence, as should be obvious from decades of his 
cinema, is far from bland. Speaking with an archaeologist about the difficulty 
of understanding the cave painters from the marks they left behind, Herzog 
likens the attempt to someone’s trying in the future to imagine the lives of 
New Yorkers based solely on a discovered list of their names. “Do they dream? 
Do they cry at night? We would never know from the phone directory.”

Never mind that the paintings are far from being piled up in a matter-of-fact 
list. They were made to glide and veer, warp and scurry by firelight across the 
surfaces of their chambers, where thousands of years of calcite deposits 
glisten like pearl. Herzog knows perfectly well that the spectacle is stunning, 
and he’s prepared to keep his implicit bargain by giving you plenty of it. 
(That’s why he complicated an already challenging shoot by filming in 3-D, so 
you could see the paintings in their plasticity, as they curve with the walls. 
Given the chance, I suspect, Herzog would have added Smell-o-Vision.) But he is 
not content merely to record these traces, however beautiful, of a vastly 
distant, all but unimaginable communal life. He is also determined to confront 
that unfathomable collective experience with what we know in the present—the 
idiosyncratic, the concrete, the individual—as if trying to look through both 
ends of a telescope at the same time.

You sense Herzog’s delight when one of the younger scientists he 
interviews—bearded, ponytailed and draped in a stylish scarf—turns out to have 
come to archaeology from a career in the circus, where he rode unicycles and 
juggled. A kindred spirit! The scientist recalls having needed to get away for 
a while after his first days of working in the cave, so overpowering were the 
paintings, but then feeling reassured and happy when the images of the Chauvet 
lions invaded his dreams. Then there’s the experimental archaeologist who plays 
“The Star-Spangled Banner” on his reconstruction of a Paleolithic flute; the 
researcher who gamely trots back and forth in a field for Herzog, demonstrating 
the spear-throwing technique of prehistoric hunters (who must have been much, 
much better at it, he admits); the master perfumer who is sniffing his way 
through the Ardèche region, collaborating on a project to reproduce the scent 
of the caves. The personalities of the principal scientists are so important to 
Herzog that at one point he stops the film to record a gallery of them in 
close-up, deep underground, while everyone silently listens for “the heartbeat 
of the cave.”

Herzog’s personality is necessarily a part of this confrontation across the 
ages, and a part of the texture of the film. Only minutes into the movie, he 
and cinematographer Peter Zeitlinger are already asserting themselves, flying 
the camera up the wall of a cliff for a dizzying, seemingly impossible view of 
the landscape. From there, the signature gestures multiply. At one point the 
camera flips upside down to accompany a description of a rockslide. At another, 
the crew walks out the far end of a long, broad chamber, taking their lights 
with them, so that the cameraman is left alone in the dark, and you are left 
imagining the intense isolation of the cave. So it goes until the coda, when 
Herzog puts you eye-to-eye with an albino crocodile in an artificial jungle, 
for reasons that could be explained in a review but probably shouldn’t be. 
Let’s just say it has to do with the challenge of understanding the cave 
painters, and is something only Herzog would have thought up.

Is this arrogance on his part? No—humility, the point being that none of us, 
Herzog included, could have thought up Chauvet Cave or really know what to make 
of it. And so for long periods in Cave of Forgotten Dreams the narration drops 
out and the cinematic personality approaches zero while Herzog leaves you alone 
with the paintings, accompanied only by the wordless chanting of Ernst 
Reijseger’s musical score. You see the lines that delicately mark out the 
nodding, lifting profiles of horses, four of them superimposed in a herd, with 
their jaws lightly parted as if panting. You see row after upraised row of 
rhinoceros horns, curving like multiple crescent moons; the snuffling, speckled 
muzzles of lions; a bison scrambling along on eight scrawny, busy legs. There 
are also scratch marks on the walls, looking like the work of bear claws; heaps 
of glistening, pearly animal skeletons scattered everywhere on the chamber 
floors (though no human remains); and on several walls the outlines of hands, 
including one that can be singled out, over and over, because of a missing 
digit. Traces of an individual presence, at a distance of 30,000 years.

Awe without sanctimony, uncanniness without mystification, a respect for the 
profound difference of other people, and other orders of beings, without any 
pretense of abandoning one’s self: these have always been characteristics of 
Herzog’s best work. These traits reach their height in Cave of Forgotten Dreams 
as he comes as close as we’re likely to get to the unapproachable—our own 
beginnings. Because Chauvet Cave must be protected, he had just one chance to 
bring out of it a filmed experience, not only for himself but perhaps for all 
filmmakers. The greatest praise you can give him is to say he didn’t blow it.

* * *

Reply via email to