Encounters At The End Of The - World

Werner Herzog's 2007 documentary, "Encounters at the End of the World," explores the human eccentricity and scientific research found at McMurdo Station in Antarctica. The Oscar-nominated film centers on "professional dreamers"—researchers and technicians living in extreme isolation—and challenges standard nature documentaries by focusing on the philosophical implications of this pristine, inhospitable environment. Learn more about the film’s background on Wikipedia.

The Plastic Cream of the Crop

Herzog’s voiceover—gravely, sardonic, and deeply poetic—guides us into this landscape. He makes it clear that he has no interest in the fluffy animals that usually populate nature documentaries. "I resist the idea of a film about penguins," he states, though he will eventually find a moment of profound tragedy in one. Instead, he is interested in the people who choose to live at the bottom of the world, a collection of philosophers, dreamers, and misfits who have fled the civilized world to work as janitors, chefs, and scientists in the human settlement of McMurdo Station. Encounters at the End of the World

Encounters at the End of the world movie review - Roger Ebert Werner Herzog's 2007 documentary, "Encounters at the End

At the same time, the film is grounded in the personal stories of the individuals who live and work on the continent. Herzog's interviews are direct and unobtrusive, allowing his subjects to reveal themselves in a natural and unguarded way. The result is a film that's both a documentary and a work of poetic expression, combining the intimacy of a character study with the grandeur of a landscape film. Instead, he is interested in the people who