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Werner Herzog Angolan Adventure Documentary
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Werner Herzog Angolan Adventure Documentary

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

There is only one Werner Herzog. The stoic German who, after being shot during an interview, replied in his signature deadpan, “it is not a significant bullet,” has an affinity for those at the end of the world — death row inmates, loners, mystics. Across his extraordinary body of work he has slipped between fiction and documentary with the ease of a man who doesn’t fear death. Now, aged 82, he has been steadily making documentaries exploring a mixture of modern and ancient phenomena — anything that enables him to travel and interview interesting oddballs. “Ghost Elephants” arrives with a little extra fanfare, premiering in Venice alongside the festival awarding him a lifetime achievement award in the form of an Honorary Lion.

VENICE, ITALY - AUGUST 27: Francis Ford Coppola (L) and Werner Herzog attend the Opening Ceremony and Golden Lion For Lifetime Achievement during the The 82nd Venice International Film Festival at Sala Grande on August 27, 2025 in Venice, Italy. (Photo by Max Cisotti/Dave Benett/WireImage)

On the surface, “Ghost Elephants” appears to be a throwback to one of Herzog’s canonical classics “Grizzly Man” (2005). Ill-fated American bear enthusiast and filmmaker Timothy Treadwell and living South African conservationist and explorer Dr. Steve Boyes are both men more comfortable living within nature than amongst their fellow humans. We meet Boyes misty-eyed at The Smithsonian National History Museum as he stands before the taxidermied corpse of the largest bull elephant to be exhibited in any museum. This, he explains, is “Henry” and Boyes has carried a photo of him around for a decade, only now seeing him for the first time. It is his dream to find the living descendants of Henry who he believes may roam in an elevated Angolan plateau nicknamed “the source of life.”

The hubristic nature of the expedition that follows, and the landscapes captured, call to mind a very different Herzog title. Although Boyes is far mellower than the wild-eyed Klaus Kinski, the pointless desire to make inroads in a land that does not need him evokes something of “Fitzcarraldo” (1982). This judgement is mine, for Herzog is far subtler and more ambivalent in his framing of Boyes, not fully suggesting in this film — made for the National Geographic with Disney money — that his subject is a loon but, equally, not leaving that interpretation off the table.

If Herzog has been compelled by the nature of the assignment to show reserve in the depiction of his leading man, he is more full-throated when it comes to his portrayal of the elephants in question; in the gulf between his enthusiasms, it is possible to see where his strongest sympathies lie. For although the scene at The Smithsonian initially seems set up to introduce us to Dr. Steve Boyes, it also introduces us to Henry, a majestic mammal technically called “The Fénykövi Elephant” after his killer, Josef Fénykövi.

To contextualize Henry, Herzog makes the most of time spent in Namibia, where Boyes has gone to find a crack team of master trackers from the Ju/Hoansi San Bushmen in the Kalahari, one of the oldest cultures on Earth whose language includes clicking. We meet a man named Xui who can “read tracks like a newspaper.” We also meet an aspiring soccer player turned anthropologist who tells the story of how Henry was shot and then chased for 15km in stark, brutal terms. 

Herzog inserts a clip from the 1966 film “Africa Addis” of a family of elephants being gunned from a helicopter (anecdotally, a member of the audience was sobbing), as well as photos of a grinning Fénykövi in front of the wrinkled mountain of Henry’s fallen body. The absurdity of men thinking it’s an achievement to destroy beautiful creatures comes across in powerful terms. As the anthropologist puts it, “Man is on a mission to destroy what he’s part of, which is biodiversity.” It’s hard not to remember one of Herzog’s most iconic and indelible lines, “I believe the common denominator of the universe is not harmony, but chaos, hostility, and murder.”

Times have changed and big-game hunting is out of fashion, although coming so soon after harrowing images of elephant poaching, it is alarming when we witness the trackers working a deadly poison into a dart. “Ghost Elephants” is nothing if not a film which commits to asides, and it is compelling when Xui tells a story of his own brush with the poison. Indeed, it is in the patchwork of vignettes that unfold around Boyes, rather than the portrait of the man himself, that the film breathes and Werner Herzog’s auteurial colors flourish. 

His whimsical adoration of the mighty beasts at the heart of things is expressed in footage of elephants moving underwater. These sequences — and cut-aways to other rare beasts — offer a magical respite from the underbaked plans of a man whose motive in finding the ghost elephants is never fully articulated. The implication is it’s part of a conservation effort and yet, as Dr. Boyes, Werner Herzog, San Bushman trackers, and trackers from the Luchazi tribe make the 2-day trip from Namibia to the Angolan highlands, the end goal is not given any anticipatory gravity. 

Herzog weighs every scene equally, not using one to hype up the next. An audience with the King of Nkangala — whose permission is required to track the ghost elephants — unfolds as casually as  footage of a tribesmen spending all day fixing his instrument. There is, in fact, more awe to the latter sequence as expressed in narration: “I know I shouldn’t romanticize him but I know that … surrounded by chickens … it doesn’t get any better than that.” 

This is a jazz film held together by Herzog’s distinctive narration with its irreverent sense of humor. It is both frustrating and intriguing to be kept in ignorance regarding his true views on Boyes. His subtle negging at the point of narrative climax is entertaining, yet it does also impact the structure of “Ghost Elephants” itself, denying us an overarching sense of perspective. The pleasure of listening to Herzog speak comes from his bracing candor, so it’s hard not to feel that something is amiss in his implication-driven take on Boyes.

Still, for those willing to piece the picture together from its most glorious sections, this is an affectionate and affection-inducing pursuit of real animals and unreachable dreams. 

Grade: B

“Ghost Elephants” premiered at the 2025 Venice Film Festival. It is currently seeking U.S. distribution.

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August 28, 2025 0 comments
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Francis Ford Coppola Honors Werner Herzog at Venice Opening Ceremony
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Francis Ford Coppola Honors Werner Herzog at Venice Opening Ceremony

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Francis Ford Coppola doesn’t have a film premiering in Venice this year, but the 86-year-old Oscar winner is duly present for the 82nd edition. His pal Mike Figgis’ behind-the-scenes portrait “Megadoc,” about the production of Coppola’s 2024 cinematic cause célèbre “Megalopolis,” debuts out of competition this week. And at the festival’s opening ceremony Wednesday night, Coppola took to the dais to champion his longtime friend, the German filmmaker Werner Herzog, recipient of the festival’s honorary Golden Lion for lifetime achievement. (“Vertigo” icon Kim Novak will also receive one later this week.)

Herzog’s new film “Ghost Elephants,” about an elusive herd of the Angolan creatures, debuts in Venice this week as part of the festival’s robust documentary slate, which also includes new films from Laura Poitras and Sofia Coppola.

La Grazia

“One must celebrate that someone like him can exist,” said Coppola of Herzog, the 82-year-old documentary and fiction auteur whose films have spanned everywhere from the Caves of Lascaux in “Cave of Forgotten Dreams” to pushing a steamboat up the Andes with Klaus Kinski in “Fitzcarraldo,” or alongside conservationist Timothy Treadwell in his last days for “Grizzly Man.”

“His work burst into my life with ‘The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser’ [from 1974], ‘Aguirre, the Wrath of God,’ and ‘Fitzcarraldo.’ I have never seen such films as these, all unique and very different from one another, and all magnificent,” said Coppola, who put up a penniless Herzog at his San Francisco house to finish the script for “Fitzcarraldo.”

“He’s written operas, he’s directed roles, he’s acted. He not only can fill the pages of an encyclopedia — Werner is one so, so filled with exuberant creativity. … We all joined together at my home in San Francisco, where there was always fun conversations and much learning and enthusiastic discoveries. I was working on a play at that time, and remember introducing one of the cast members, Lena, who eventually became his wife. So when it comes down to is this: If Werner has limits, I don’t know what they are. Werner’s life and his very existence send a challenge to everyone out there: copy, if you can. And all of us truly wonder if anyone ever will. Werner, I will eat my hat if anyone comes [along] who can do it.”

VENICE, ITALY - AUGUST 27: Werner Herzog poses with Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement Award after the opening ceremony during the 82nd Venice International Film Festival on August 27, 2025 in Venice, Italy. (Photo by Andreas Rentz/Getty Images)
Werner Herzog poses with the Golden LionGetty Images

A tearful Herzog took to the stage at the Sala Grande on the Lido di Venezia. “Francis has been extremely kind and generous to me,” Herzog said. “We know each other for half a century by now. He’s been generous, inviting me at a time when I didn’t have money to pay for a hotel room. I stayed at his house in San Francisco and wrote my screenplay of ‘Fitzcarraldo.’ Both of us came very close to making a very big film about the conquest of Mexico together, seen from the perspective of the Aztecs, a film project that did not materialize, but it’s a wonderful time when we plotted about it. And, of course, without Francis, I would not have met my wonderful wife, Lena. In fact, it is not true that we are 30 years together. Now it is to be correct: 29 years, 11 months, and nine days.”

Herzog — whose “Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans” and “My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done?” both played Venice in competition in 2009 — concluded, “I have always tried to strive for something that goes deeper beyond what you normally see in movie theaters. Go into a deep form of poetry that is possible in cinema, searching for truth in unusual ways. Truth is always somehow in cinema. It’s mysterious and elusive, and I always try to do something which was sublime or something transcendental. This may sound a little bit lofty. So in fact, I do believe that all this has similar reasons. I always wanted to be a good soldier of cinema.”

Later in the opening ceremony, competition jury president Alexander Payne took to the stage hours after navigating questions about Gaza during the jury press conference. Protests surrounding the ongoing genocide in Gaza are roundly expected to dominate event space and news chatter throughout the fest.

The jury also includes filmmakers Stéphane Brizé, Maura Delpero, Cristian Mungiu, and Mohammad Rasoulof, and actors Zhao Tao and 2025 Best Actress Oscar nominee Fernanda Torres, who together will look at 21 films from the likes of Paolo Sorrentino (whose “La Grazia” opened the festival), Yorgos Lanthimos, Noah Baumbach, Park Chan-wook, Kathryn Bigelow, Guillermo del Toro, Olivier Assayas, Mona Fastvold, Benny Safdie, Jim Jarmusch, and more.

“My fellow jurors and I express our great honor of being asked to serve on the jury of this year’s Venice Film Festival, and we offer our greatest respect and warmest congratulations to all the superb filmmakers whose work we have the privilege of seeing with virgin eyes,” Payne said following a tribute reel montaging moments from his career, from “Sideways” to “The Descendants.” “I encourage my fellow jury members and myself to consider that we know something about cinema, but also nothing at all, to look at each movie simultaneously with the eyes of a professional but also with the eyes of a child who is perhaps seeing a film for the very first time. We know that each of the films will be some kind of miracle, as the existence of cinema itself is a miracle, and we approach our work with the spirit of great joy.”

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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