The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser |  | Director: Werner Herzog Actors: Bruno S., Walter Ladengast, Brigitte Mira, Willy Semmelrogge, Michael Kroecher Studio: Starz / Anchor Bay Category: DVD
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Seller: digitaleyes_dvdplanet Rating: 29 reviews
Format: Anamorphic, Color, DVD, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: German (Original Language), English (Subtitled) Rating: Unrated Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.77:1 Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 110 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.3 x 0.6
MPN: ANBD11567D UPC: 013131156799 EAN: 0013131156799
Theatrical Release Date: 1975 Release Date: January 8, 2002 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Studio: Starz/sphe Release Date: 01/08/2002
Amazon.com In his widely acclaimed attempt to fathom The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser, director Werner Herzog probes a real-life mystery that has puzzled German society for nearly two centuries. In the title role, Herzog ingeniously cast the equally mysterious street musician Bruno S., whose mesmerizing performance is unique in the history of film. Isolated since infancy in a dank cellar, the now-adult Kaspar is abandoned in 1820s Nuremburg by his unknown custodian; townsfolk futilely speculate on his origins, and he's shaped by a bourgeois villager who places rigid, conflicting restraints on his new and peculiar perspective on the world around him. It's telling that Herzog's preferred title is Every Man for Himself and God Against All, for this is an eerily effective cautionary tale about an innocent man of nature who moves from one prison to another in a cruelly fateful universe. The mystery lingers, making The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser a deep, resonant reflection on the nature of humanity. --Jeff Shannon
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 29
Not what I thought it would be May 18, 2009 Orbit Seven (Austin, TX USA) I was looking for a movie in German, it was advertised, on the cover it states as the language - German it is in English
"What a fine, what a beautiful report this will make!" January 12, 2009 Bryan Byrd (Daveport, Iowa) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
When Clemens Scheitz, the scribe from "Kasper Hauser", walks away at the end of the film, muttering to himself what a fine report he will make of the mystery of the abandoned young man Kasper Hauser, it is apparent that Werner Herzog is making a statement about missing the forest for the trees. Or perhaps a more apt analogy would be missing the beauty of the forest because we are too busy counting all the leaves. Either way, the true enigma, the true mystery surrounding Kasper, according to Herzog, is not so much where he came from and how he existed before being abandoned in the village square, but how a person with no experience whatsoever with the outside world would perceive reality. What would a bird, a tree, a fellow human seem like to someone who had been locked in a cellar for their entire life? How would it be different from someone with a normal upbringing? Would either one be more valid?
At the end of "Kasper Hauser", I realized I had watched a very tender movie, one that floated around the edges of my mind for several days after. I am not a fan of all of Herzog's films, though I do enjoy several of them. But what makes "Kasper" one of his best is the fantastic performance of Bruno S. I believe Herzog took some flak for casting Bruno, since there was some question of his competancy. I don't know about that, but I thought he handled the acting chores in both "Kasper" and in Stroszek superbly, and because of Herzog's direction, Bruno's characters emerge with the most humanity, the most dignity.
This film garners high reviews here, and deservedly so, for its thought provoking subject matter and sensuous filmmaking technique. Someone unfamiliar with Herzog's films might be disappointed after watching though. This is not your standard Hollywood type movie. That's not to say one is better than the other - beauty is always in the eye of the beholder - but this is a German film, with English subtitles, and that is enough to discourage some people from watching right there. The other thing is Herzog's directing style is also different, at times difficult to adjust to. When he discovers a shot he likes, he lingers. And lingers. And lingers some more, until, as a viewer, I'm tempted to shout at the screen, "Ok, already".
If you are a Herzog fan, and haven't seen "Kasper Hauser", I'd strongly recommend it. If you are not, but are looking for something different and thought provoking, then I'd still recommend this film. Give it a chance, and let this tender movie wash over you. See if it doesn't linger in your mind for many days after.
"I dreamt of the Caucasus..." July 8, 2008 Kerry Walters (Lewisburg, PA USA) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
It seems that every Herzog film I see is better than the last, and "The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser" continues that trend. Herzog tells the story of the apparently feral youth who showed up in a Bavarian town in the early 19th century, and of the five years he lived being groomed for "civilization."
In Herzog's hands, the tale is a melancholy and occasionally poignant one. Hauser is unspeakably abused for most of his life by his jailer (his father?), chained to a cellar basement with no human companionship, never having seen the light of day. Upon his mysterious release, he's barely able to speak or stand, and is viewed as something between a "noble savage" and a monster. Taken in hand by a kindly doctor, Kaspar gradually learns to speak and to feel and haltingly express sometimes overwhelming emotions when confronted with the beauty of the natural world, music, and poetry. But he feels trapped inside his own limitations and frustratingly stymied. As his Sehnsucht deepens, he finds himself increasingly alienated by the civilized world into which he's been cast and the identity that's being forced on him by those authority figures who think they know best.
The depth of Kaspar's soul-hunger is expressed several times throughout the film, but perhaps the most memorable occasion is when he's asked if he ever dreamt during his years of speechless imprisonment. "Yes," he replies. "I dreamt of the Caucasus." He dreamt of high, cold, pure places. In that single line, it seems to me that Herzog captures the mystery, joy, and tragedy of the human longing for transcendence.
The script is excellent, the cinematography entrancing--corn rippling in the wind, Kaspar sucking an egg and gazing out through a crack in the shed where he sits, the interspersions of magic lantern-like images of tall mountain peaks and barren deserts--and the musical score nicely accenturates the scenes and story. But without a doubt, the center of the film is the incomparable performance of Bruno S. as Kaspar.
Viewers might be interested in comparing Herzog's "Kaspar" with Truffaut's "L'Enfant sauvage."
unforgettable March 31, 2008 Haseeb (Tempe, AZ United States) One of the best films I've seen in a while. This is a very somber true story of a strange young man who suddenly appeared in the middle of Nuremberg, Germany in 1828. He had been abandoned by his parents and was left locked up alone in a dungeon for 17 years. He had no human contact other than a man who would come in to periodically clean and feed him (bread and water) like a caged animal. For whatever reason which was not explained, the man who fed and cleaned him eventually took him out, taught him how to walk and write and discarded him in the middle of town. This story focuses on his life and interactions with others. I think the film was beautifully done and it will haunt my memory for a very long time, perhaps forever.
Hauser's character mentioned in the film "why is everything so difficult for me?". Are things much easier for any of us though? We learned how to do a lot more at a younger age than him, but we all struggle to varying degrees. Hauser struggles in ways most of us as adults don't, but we struggle in ways he does not.
Enigma of Kaspar Hauser July 5, 2007 John Farr 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
With "Kaspar," a somber yet engrossing drama accentuated by the lilting strains of Pachelbel's Canon, Herzog found an unusually rich metaphor for man's primitive state. Bruno S., a mental patient taken in by the audacious Teutonic filmmaker, fully embraced the role, refusing even to doff his 19th-century costume at the end of a day's shoot. He plays Kaspar as a perpetually shell-shocked, almost autistic innocent whose strained efforts to communicate and assimilate are thwarted by a profound, perhaps prophetic otherness. The question for Herzog, of course, is whether reason enlightens or imprisons us--an "Enigma" well worth pondering.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 29
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