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Scream of Stone

Cerro Torre: Schrei aus Stein

Canada, France, Germany

1991

105 Min
Color
1.85:1
German
  • Currently 2.8/5 Stars.
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DIR Werner Herzog

PROD Henry Lange, Richard Sadler, Walter Saxer

SCR Hans-Ulrich Klenner, Walter Saxer, Robert Geoffrion, Reinhold Messner

DP Rainer Klausmann

CAST Vittorio Mezzogiorno, Mathilda May, Stefan Glowacz, Al Waxman, Gunilla Karlzen, Chavela Vargas, Brad Dourif, Donald Sutherland, Werner Herzog

ED Suzanne Baron

PROD DES Juan Santiago

MUSIC Sarah Hopkins, Alan Lamb, Ingram Marshall, Atahualpa Yupanqui

Venice (Competition), Berlinale (New German Films)

Synopsis

The organizer of the indoor free climbing world championships, Ivan Rodanovic, invites worldfamous alpine climber Roger Innerkofler to participate. Martin Edelmeier, a German who is defending champion, wins the competition. In an interview afterwards, Innerkofler is sceptical about whether a free climber can tackle a “real” mountain. So Martin decides to follow Roger on an expedition to Cerro Torre. They are accompanied by Ivan, Katharina, Roger’s friend and secretary, and Hans Adler, one of Innerkofler’s companions in his two previous climbing attempts. While bad weather keeps the group stuck at the base camp, they discover that, encamped in a nearby cave lives a fanatical climber who lost four fingers in his effort to reach the top of Cerro Torre. Martin convinces Hans to attempt to complete the climb, but a snow avalanche slices Hans’s cord, causing him to fall to his death. Martin manages to descend. Upon his return to Buenos Aires, Martin claims publicly that he has climbed Cerro. The press challenges the authenticity of his claim, so he decides to return to Patagonia… —Thessaloniki International Film Festival

Director

Original

Werner Herzog

One of the most influential filmmakers in New German Cinema and one of the most extreme personalities in film, Werner Herzog quickly gained recognition not only for creating some of the most fantastic narratives in the Film history, but for pushing himself and his crew to absurd and unprecedented lengths, again and again, in order to achieve the effects he demanded. Born Werner Stipetic in Munich on September 5, 1942, Herzog came of age in Sachrang, Bavaria, amid extreme poverty and destitution. After Herzog turned seventeen, a German film producer optioned one of his screenplays, then promptly destroyed the contract when he discovered the author’s age. Circa 1962, 20-year-old Herzog enrolled in the University of Munich as a history and literature student, and produced his first motion picture, the twelve minute Herakles, his second short Game in the Sand, and his third, the pacifist tract The Unprecedented Defense of Fortress Deutschkreuz.In 1963, he established his own production… read more

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Jake Mulligan

26Aug10

Beautiful cinematography, but the humor is misplaced, the characters fairly empty or stereotypical, and the ending comes closer to a sly wink than to the emotional levity often associated with Herzog. His most passable work.

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