La Soufrière


Poster image La Soufrière

Herzog takes a film crew to the island of Guadeloupe when he hears that the volcano on the island is going to erupt. Everyone has left, except for one old man who refuses to leave. Herzog catches the eeriness of an abandoned city, with stop lights cycling over an empty intersection.



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Director

Werner Herzog

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Is it ever acceptable to endanger your own life, and the lives of your teammates, in the name of art? In keeping with his nature, that’s exactly what Werner Herzog did when traveling to Guadeloupe to interview residents who refused to evacuate their homes in the face of the Soufrière volcano’s imminent eruption. Abandoned homes, ransacked businesses, deserted streets now filled only with stray dogs and wild animals, sulfurous mountains emitting toxic gases: the images captured by photographic director Ed Lachman are just as stunning as they are unimaginable. Watching them make a perilous approach towards the base of the volcano, we cannot help but ask what on earth this film crew was doing there, in the middle of what would soon be a disaster area. We also wonder whether they’ll actually meet these hypothetical and recalcitrant residents, and we fear the worst—namely, that the island will be wiped out by the looming volcano. La Soufrière is filled with captivating suspense that exceeds all comprehension and challenges the very laws of nature.

 

 

Frédéric Savard
Archivist and programmer

 

 


  • FR_La soufrière

    FR_La soufrière


    Language: Français
    Subtitles: 266--la-soufriere--FR--werner-herzog---1977.vtt
  • EN_La soufrière

    EN_La soufrière


    Language: English
    Subtitles: 266--la-soufriere--EN--werner-herzog---1977.vtt
  • Année 1977
  • Pays Germany
  • Durée 31
  • Producteur Werner Herzog Filmproduktion
  • Langue English
  • Sous-titres French, English
  • Résumé court A report about an inevitable catastrophe that did not take place.
  • Programmateur Frédéric Savard|Archivist and programmer ;

Is it ever acceptable to endanger your own life, and the lives of your teammates, in the name of art? In keeping with his nature, that’s exactly what Werner Herzog did when traveling to Guadeloupe to interview residents who refused to evacuate their homes in the face of the Soufrière volcano’s imminent eruption. Abandoned homes, ransacked businesses, deserted streets now filled only with stray dogs and wild animals, sulfurous mountains emitting toxic gases: the images captured by photographic director Ed Lachman are just as stunning as they are unimaginable. Watching them make a perilous approach towards the base of the volcano, we cannot help but ask what on earth this film crew was doing there, in the middle of what would soon be a disaster area. We also wonder whether they’ll actually meet these hypothetical and recalcitrant residents, and we fear the worst—namely, that the island will be wiped out by the looming volcano. La Soufrière is filled with captivating suspense that exceeds all comprehension and challenges the very laws of nature.

 

 

Frédéric Savard
Archivist and programmer

 

 


  • FR_La soufrière

    FR_La soufrière


    Language: Français
    Subtitles: 266--la-soufriere--FR--werner-herzog---1977.vtt
  • EN_La soufrière

    EN_La soufrière


    Language: English
    Subtitles: 266--la-soufriere--EN--werner-herzog---1977.vtt
  • Année 1977
  • Pays Germany
  • Durée 31
  • Producteur Werner Herzog Filmproduktion
  • Langue English
  • Sous-titres French, English
  • Résumé court A report about an inevitable catastrophe that did not take place.
  • Programmateur Frédéric Savard|Archivist and programmer ;

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