Cave of Forgotten Dreams Comments

  • Freda 2023-07-14 23:57:29

    It feels like watching a documentary about prehistoric art late at night...

  • Hermann 2023-07-13 05:55:56

    Three-and-a-half stars, it is considered a relatively mediocre work in Herzog's documentaries. It lacks his personal performance and insights, but it is more than one grade higher than ordinary...

  • Elinore 2023-07-10 09:08:19

    The part of Wulf Hein wearing elk leather and playing "The Star-Spangled Banner" with a small bone flute is really mocking, I don't know what Americans feel when they see it. . It is estimated that most people only know how to be instantly...

  • Amir 2023-07-09 14:09:24

    21/7/1: What a precious record of ancient civilizations, be sure to collect...

  • Adeline 2023-06-16 04:42:01

    It was painted so well 30,000 years...

  • Kaitlin 2023-06-15 07:46:04

    Whoever decide to make this 3D is a...

  • Kole 2023-06-10 06:43:11

    2D looks and feels the same way. In addition, I think the director's French English is annoying....

  • Bettye 2023-06-06 18:07:58

    The most impressive part is about a complete fresco. The creation time of the upper part and the lower part is 5,000 years apart. Such a time dimension challenges the ability to imagine time...

  • Marilyne 2023-06-06 13:52:58

    Herzog couldn't have been more suitable for this...

  • Maia 2023-06-04 04:46:52

    Herzog's first 3D film, "The Cave of Forgotten Dreams" is closer to a popular science film. The 3D camera set in the cave simulates a small space, and the people sitting in the movie theater also feel narrow. Herzog explains the remains of primitive civilization in the cave in the voiceover. It is said that Herzog initially resisted the use of 3D. I don't know why he is so keen on making documentaries, but it is a pity that this kind of subject matter is not of my...

Extended Reading

Cave of Forgotten Dreams quotes

  • Werner Herzog: The artist painted this bison with eight legs, suggesting movement - almost a form of proto-cinema.

  • Nicholas Conard: I think what's extremely important is that we realize that archeology today is not a heroic adventure with spades and picks, but high tech scientific work that's done with incredible detail.