The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser Comments

  • Abelardo 2022-03-19 09:01:11

    "Can't you hear the screams that surround us, which you call silence?" A beginning can also be a full story. After Casper can speak, he is full of witty words, a born philosopher, and the suffering in his life is short, but the film has left a detached and pleasant aftertaste and a lot of god-like...

  • Coby 2022-03-19 09:01:11

    Circus spectacle, paranoia of logicians (Village of Truth, Village of Lies, Tree Frogs), High Society Dinner of the Earl, Sacred Music Sermons in the Church, Beaten and Stabbed in the Head, Final Dissections (So-called Malformed Brain, Liver ) showed the narrow-mindedness, stereotypes and violence of human society, but the family (the little boy) who took care of him at first and the old maid later were still a little warm. Looking at human society, what would it be like to cross the desert to...

  • Casey 2022-03-19 09:01:11

    Kaspar Hauser is like a child in the emperor's new clothes. Of course, this film is not a satire of naked human civilization, but an endless sympathy for human...

  • Kasey 2022-03-19 09:01:11

    9/10. Hersuo used original and serene natural images to accompany Rosso's "Requiem" to reinforce the indifference and persecution of the "adopting fathers", and the documentary almost bold analysis reproduces a naive and lonely marginal person and his fables. The dreaming situation, combined with the simple and peculiar composition and rough and obscure editing, formed the overall style of calm and violent mood. A civilization that has developed for thousands of years cannot even bear the...

  • Keagan 2022-03-18 09:01:10

    Bocklinesque and Friedrichesque, both visually and spiritually. Sensation comes...

  • Sydnie 2022-03-18 09:01:10

    Herzog's masterpiece. The film is completely a Kantian behavioral experiment. Time and space intuition-language/logic-art and religion, the kink relationship between babies/adults and "human civilization" emerging from the [dark and silent world]-style cellar is unfolded in detail at different levels. (Somewhere a reference to Truffaut's [Wild Child]?) The "transcendental" passages in the film are wonderful (the mountaintop in the mist, the desert described in the dying...

  • Keegan 2022-03-17 09:01:10

    Cave Altarmia Animal-like sounds Pigs remove a small piece from their blankets to cover the figurine of a horse next to...

  • Monserrat 2022-03-17 09:01:10

    An ignorant and pure soul struggles hard in the world, and human beings are destined to be unable to survive in the world; looking at the prehistoric times or after the end of the world with "dying eyes" is nothing less than a prophet sent by God to test mankind and predict the human condition. , in the interspersed pictures with ancient colors, there is a mysterious dreamy feeling, which is indeed a "European...

  • Danielle 2022-03-16 09:01:09

    A discussion on the contradiction between human nature and sociality. In addition to the warm embellishment, it is more through a eccentric simple, honest and simple idealism to face the speculation of human society, to doubt the obstinate and forced hypocritical religion. To paraphrase "Easy Rider", "They're not afraid of you, they're afraid of what you represent." But the ending is slightly weaker, and Herzog of the extreme route is the closest to the Palme d'Or. (4.5...

  • Erwin 2022-03-16 09:01:09

    Herzog's epic work benefits from two things. One is the overflowing compassion in every frame, a perspective that balances Herzog's rather physical style. The second is the strong presence of the male protagonist in front of the camera. Herzog is opposed to the German way of thinking with rationality as the main axis, showing the failure of the process of "education" and "socialization", and the reason lies in "rationality", "logic" and "language" themselves. is constructed. After an outsider...

Extended Reading

The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser quotes

  • Kaspar Hauser: It seems to me that my coming into this world was a very hard fall.

  • Kaspar Hauser: Nothing lives less in me than my life.