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| Index | 27 reviews in total |
35 out of 39 people found the following review useful:
My Favorite Kinski/Herzog, 2 June 2003
Author:
chexmix from Brooklyn, NY
I seriously need to re-watch *all* of Herzog's films, but in the flicker of
memory this is my favorite.
For me, the static camera-work fits the hothouse atmosphere of Buchner's
play perfectly. I think especially of the early scene where Woyzeck is
shaving the Captain, and the camera doesn't move *at all* for what seems
like forever ... technically, it is reminiscent of some of Jim Jarmusch's
early films where the camera is hilariously static. Here, it is horrifyingly
static.
And Kinski has never been more possessed, more demonically almost out of
control. I just can't watch him, particularly during the intense (slow
motion!) climactic sequence, and then "come back" to Hollywood movies and
watch ... well, say, Kevin Costner. Sorry. Guess I'm a
snob.
Finally, the strange, sawing music just sends me over the top every time, my
skin tingling. To me this is an absolutely unforgettable, brilliant film
experience. It disturbs the living hell out of me, and I like
that.
26 out of 29 people found the following review useful:
Intense, Powerful, Disturbing, 5 August 2000
Author:
(casey_cleary@hotmail.com) from Washington, USA
One of Werner Herzog's most unrecognized films, Woyzeck is utterly
brilliant.
Few films succeed at portraying frustration and madness as much as this.
Among them are Scorsese's "Taxi Driver" and Lodge Kerrigan's "Clean
Shaven"
Klaus Kinski's performance is so good that just watching him is tiring,
and
the viewer is left anticipating when he will finally snap.
Few films stick with me as much as this one and the sped up opening
sequence
is one of the most memorable opening scenes of any film I've
seen.
23 out of 27 people found the following review useful:
Kinski, 1 August 2004
Author:
turing77 from United States
This movie is a mere bagatelle when contrasted with Herzog's other herculean efforts on Aquirre and Fitzcarraldo. The story is simple and quaint, the scale small, but the performance by Kinski is titanic. The sequence where Woyzeck murders his wife is absolutely unbelievable. The scene is set in slow-motion to music, so all acting is visual. With his face, Kinski becomes a man who has killed his wife. This isn't acting: this is reality. It is one of the most impressive and heart-wrenching things ever captured on film. No wonder Herzog, that stickler for authenticity, kept coming back to Kinski, no matter how intolerable the man became. Eva Mattes as Frau Woyzeck is luminous, and the photography is exceptional. As with all Herzog works, there is a feast of imagery for the eyes.
16 out of 19 people found the following review useful:
Inspiring Acting on Part of Klaus Kinski, 18 May 2001
Author:
marquis de cinema from Boston, MA
The opening fast motion sequence is an inspiring piece of film making.
Filmed with much humor and viciousness. What gives the scene a realistic
touch is the fact the soldier was really kicking and physically abusing the
actor because Klaus Kinski had told him to do it. This scene sets up the
story for the rest of the film. Also indicates the abuse the main character
will take ranging from his wife to his superior officers.
Woyzeck(1979) delves into the theme of man vs nature extensively thoughout
the movie. Woyzeck is a man who fights hard to keep his sanity intact. He
has a fight with nature because to be with nature for him is to lose his
sanity. The theme of man vs nature is a main motif in most of Werner
Herzog's work. In the end the main character loses out to nature in a big
and scary way.
A engrossing tragedy of epic proportions. The movie is tragic because the
main character never develops any self will until he becomes totally insane.
Another thing that makes the film a tragedy is the depths the main
character plunges after taking the sort of garbage he has to endured from
people around him. Woyzeck is in the traditional of tragic figures like
Oedipus Rex and other famous Greek and Roman literary legends. Finally,
Woyzeck is a tragic figure because he is unable to be the person he wants to
be.
The acting of Klaus Kinski is awe inducing and thought provoking. Never
before have I seen an actor risk his sanity with the courage and conviction
of Klaus Kinski. Has been done before but rarely with this frightening
realism. His performance here is just as jaw dropping as his forceful
performance in Aguirre:The Wrath of God(1974). Film shows why he is the
European Marlon Brando.
The direction is unusually average for a Werner Herzog movie. His direction
is brilliant in spots but there are times when the direction of Werner
Herzog tends to bog down. May not be his most inspiring direction of his
career but is not as bad as many people have commented on. This is probably
the sole reason the film does not get the same respect as other Herzog
classics. One thing positive about the direction of Werner Herzog here is
he brings out the best acting in Klaus Kinski.
The main character in Woyzeck(1979) has many things in common with other
main characters from the Herzog-Kinski collaborations. One, the characters
of Aguirre, Fitzcaraldo, Nosfertu, and Cobra Verde are surrounded by
alienation and loneliness. Two, these characters fight a losing battle to
stay one step ahead of insanity. Three, they are people who want power that
they are unable to have. Four, They are vulnerable people who are attacked
from all sides.
There are many similarities between the films Signs of Life(1968) and
Woyzeck(1979). One, the two main characters are low level soldiers who take
much abuse from their superior. Two, both are about characters who have a
conflict with nature. Three, both films deal with the themes of alienation
and loneliness. Finally, in the two films the main characters surrender to
nature and ultimately become insane.
The musical score of Woyzeck has an atmospheric and gothic ring to it. Sets
the mood and behavior for the main character played by Klaus Kinski. One of
the best musical scores in a Werner Herzog feature film. The main theme
title seems to set up what Woyzeck will do in each scene which he occupies.
The use of the main theme during the murder scene is as effective as the
music used in Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho(1960).
The murder scene in the climax is one that is daring and shocking in its
depiction of intense violence. Although the scene is not very good it is
still done with bravado and high level intensity. The murder represents
Woyzeck's rebellion against the society which has pushed him around all his
life. Its this scene that he comes to term with nature and loses his grip
on sanity. The murder scene in Woyzeck(1979) is as shocking to watch as the
murder scenes from Scarlet Street(1946), Psycho(1960), and
Suspiria(1977).
Originally written for the actor from The Mystery of kaspar Hauser but was
changed because the direction thought the actor was too young to play the
role of Woyzeck. Based on a famous play by well known German playwright,
Georg Buchner. Filmed right after completing the picture, Nosferatu the
Vampire(1979). The acting of Eva Mattes is filled with eroticism and
tragedy. Anchor Bay did a wonderful job with the presentation of
Woyzeck(1979) for DVD.
20 out of 28 people found the following review useful:
Nightmare schizo-comedy - Shakespeare a la Herzog, 3 October 2005
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Author:
mstomaso from Vulcan
I will put the bottom line at the top so you can decide whether to
bother reading on (and seeing this film).
This is certainly not a film for everybody. If you find the following
review annoying, and you feel as if you wasted time reading it - BY ALL
MEANS - avoid seeing this film, you simply won't enjoy it.
Another Herzog-Kinski masterwork, Woyzeck is one of the weirdest films
of the 1970s. I do not use the word "weird" very often, but it is so
appropriate for this film that an endless string of adjectives, adverbs
and modifiers I would need to replace it seem thoroughly inadequate.
Despite the vast and deep power and beauty of this film, I don't want
to label it "good". Unlike some of the less surreal Herzog-Kinski
collaborations, the amount of attention you pay to this film does not
necessarily correspond to the amount of sense you will be able to make
of it. Mostly, I think it's a film about psychosis - both personal
psychosis (Woyzeck himself) and social psychosis (Woyzeck's miserable
treatment at the hands of virtually everybody around him in his
back-water town in Nazi occupied Poland).
For the first half of the film you will feel as if you are playing a
VERY serious version of Monty Python's "Spot the Loonie." But, in this
case, you are looking for the HEAD LOONIE in a whole melange of
maniacs. The string of soliloquies which eventually leads to the
climactic ending, hearkens back to Shakespearean tragedies, but until
the very end, you don't necessarily know whether to think of this film
as a comedy or the very dark and sinister tragedy that it seems to be.
Even after the film exposes itself so dramatically in the end, I am
still inclined to see it as a very deranged bit of comedy as much as
anything else. Such is the beauty of Herzog's artistic method - nothing
is straightforward, much is hideous and beautiful, and in a peculiar
metaphysical and aesthetic sense, it all makes perfect sense.
Klaus Kinski gives a signature performance and the rest of the cast,
though excellent, is barely noticeable with Kinski's intensity in the
foreground. Though less accessible than many of Kinski's more popular
works (Aguirre, Fitzcarraldo, Nosferatu), this is nevertheless a unique
and brilliant blend of one of the greatest actor-director teams of all
time.
11 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
Klaus Kinski is Perfect as Tormented Solider, 25 September 2000
Author:
eibon04 from New York City, NY
Klaus Kinski gives a couragous effort that deserved an Oscar for Best
Actor
in 1979. Woyzeck(1979) deals with a lower level solider who's clinging to
the small amount of sanity left in him. The film is competently done by
Werner Herzog. The motion Picture comes on the heels of Herzog's
Nosferatu(1979). Its one of the best films by Werner Herzog that isn't as
notorious as films like Fitzcarraldo(1982), Aguirre:The Wrath of
God(1974),
and The Mystery of Kaspar Hausar(1975).
There is a murder in the movie that's worthy of the shower scene in
Psycho(1960). Woyzeck(1979) follows a few themes that were prominent in
Herzog's debut Signs of Life(1967). The fast motion scene at the
beginning
is marvolous. Klaus Kinski was really being kicked around in the opening
scene. Klaus Kinski did such a great job at his realistic portrayal that
the actor almost ended up like the main character.
10 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
The best Herzog/Kinski?, 14 June 2005
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Author:
Enoch Sneed from United Kingdom
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Compared with the other films they made together in the Andes, the
Amazon and West Africa this Herzog/Kinski version of 'Woyzeck' seems
very small-scale indeed. The shoot was equally small-scale, with a
brief schedule and long takes to reduce the number of set-ups.
I think the film is all the better for this. The story telling is brisk
and straightforward and the acting uniformly excellent. If Kinski had
only made this one film we would have known he was a remarkable actor.
From the opening scene his movement and body-language convey Woyzeck's
feverish restlessness and inner tensions. Here we don't have Kinski the
raving 'ubermensch', but a pitiful little runt of a man who is put upon
by everyone. Even his doctor treats Woyzeck as no more than a
laboratory animal. Woyzeck meanwhile is so conditioned to a life of
obedience that he willingly lives on nothing but peas for months on end
as part of the doctor's investigations.
The last straw comes when Woyzeck's common-law wife has a night of sex
with a handsome army musician. We are not asked to judge this woman:
she enjoys sex, she thinks the musician will be a good sexual partner
so she gives herself to him.
Woyzeck is distraught. The one person he felt he could trust in this
world has betrayed him. He can't fight back against the musician (a
robust man who lifts Woyzeck with one hand). His frustration turns into
tortured insanity and murder.
This short, intense film is a little masterpiece. Highly recommended.
5 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Left Elbow Index, 6 November 2009
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Author:
eldino33 from United States
The Left Elbow Index considers seven specific elements of a film on a scale of 10 to 1, with 10 being highest, to help in deciding if a film is worth watching: acting, sets, dialogue, plot, character, continuity, and artistry. The acting in this film is superb and thereby rates a 10. Klaus Kinski is exceptional, so much so that it unlikely anyone else could do nearly as well in this role. He is simply stunning. In this regard, it is beyond Shakespearian. Werner Herzog, in his well publicized love-hate relation with Kinski, claims people like Brando are just kintergarten compared to Kinski--no faint praise, indeed. The sets is this film seem carefully planned and constructed. They are appropriate and uncontrived, whether indoors or out, therefore a 9. Dialogue rates a 10 in that it is at times appropriately ironic, profound, or normal. It all cases one listens to every word. The film is replete with dozens of unforgettable lines, like: "Death should be cheap but it should not be free" (by the pawnbroker selling the knife) and "When she got to the moon she found it was made of rotted wood" (by Marie). The Index believes that the plot is an 8, mostly because there seems to be some misleading action. Perhaps this is related to Woyzeck's mental state. It seems unlikely that a sane person could follow his trail. Character development rates a 10, whether related to major or to minor characters. Continuity (an 8) results in a consistent view of the action. For example, the role of the military, morality for the poor, the idea that the poor will work in heaven, and other ideas never escape the intellectual frame of the film. Consistent costuming lends to this. Herzog's background in history and the humanities certainly provides an easy 10 rating for artistry. His use of light and dark rivals that of the THE POTATO EATERS, the kitchen scene with Marie reminds one of GIRL SITTING BY THE WINDOW, and there are other traditional allusions. Herzog says he made the film in just eighteen days, and edited the cuts in just four days. He claims that is how it should be, that it was perfect. Perfect, of course, is an imperfect word. I'm not certain I would claim this film is perfect: however, it is exceptional enough for me to put it on my "see often" list. The Index gives it a 9.3---a bonus for dealing with the absurdity of human existence pushes it closer to a 10. I strongly recommend this film.
7 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
the most heart-wrenching piece of film Herzog/Kinski did (or, at least, that I have seen yet), 25 November 2006
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Author:
MisterWhiplash from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Don't get me wrong, I thought Aguirre was a great movie, Fitzcarraldo
was a wildly mad genius of an epic, and Nosferatu was a very
respectable take on the legend, but watching Woyzeck is like getting an
immense, harsh, and assuredly charged rush of poetic madness from a
filmmaker and star who know exactly what they're doing. It's not
"perfect", then again when it comes to poetry Herzog usually dominates
with visuals over dialog (he's also working off of another source this
time as well). But here is a case where the sense of forbidding
fatalism is at an incredible high, and looking at Klaus Kinski's face
at times is like looking into the soul of a truly tortured, insane form
of a human being.
What's interesting, and even quite tragic to an extent, in seeing the
tale of Woyzeck is that he is basically an underling, who is fed a
strict diet of peas and the occasional mutton, and is totally
subservient to his fairly whacked out superior officers. What it is
exactly that Woyzeck is doing as an officer is anyone's guess, but to
me seeing how the higher-ups treated Woyzeck is fascist (though for
what end who can say, aside from their amusement at their manic
squire).
Then there's Marie, played by Eva Mattes in a well deserved Cannes
winning turn, Woyzeck's love and mother of his little out-of-wedlock
boy. One can already tell in little scenes like when Woyzeck makes his
co-soldier duck into the bushes over a 'did you hear that/see that'
not-there presence that he's on edge. Needless to say it only adds salt
to the wound when Woyzeck accuses Marie of adultery, as it's with a
brutish Captain (Wolfgang Reichmann in a small but imposing role). And
then it all leads up to a terrifying crime that comes from somewhere
inside of Woyzeck, where it's been building up increasingly over time.
Herzog presents this story, based on an unfinished play, with a
breathtaking visual scheme, however with less of the epic visual
virtuosity of Aguirre and this time settles for something more basic,
but still always eye-grabbing. I didn't even notice how few cuts there
are supposed to be (less than 30), but it gives the audience much more
time to really feel and be enveloped by these characters, particularly
Woyzeck and Marie.
There have already been some great, powerhouse scenes- some with the
tension stacked up incredibly, like when Woyzeck is stuck without an
explanation, aside from crazy philosophy, as to why he urinated on a
wall, or when Woyzeck makes the full-on accusation to Marie about the
affair, with full Kinski-body-gyrations included- by the time the
climax comes around. But for me, this is really not only one of
Herzog's most moving and bleak scenes, but maybe one of the most
heartbreaking in all of cinema. We as the audience can guess what has
been coming; there's practically a Crime & Punishment sensibility
that's been streaming forward in the ten-fifteen minutes preceding this
scene. Yet the combination of three cinematic elements becomes
overwhelming for me as a movie-viewer.
At first we see the actual murder happen, with the film's main music
title playing over slow-motion and Kinski with a face that would make
Joe Pesci cringe. But then we get another piece of music, a much more
sad piece of music not heard yet in the film, as Woyzeck continues
slower and slower until stopping loaded with tears in his eyes, and
still in slow-motion. I started to feel so connected somehow to what
was going on I teared up, too. Throughout the film I knew Woyzeck was
crazy, and from the opening scene (which is actually kind of hilarious
when taken out of context) throughout the picture, I knew something had
to give. But the power of director's aesthetic choice, which is
spellbinding and fully dramatic, and Kinski's performance make it
something comparable to Dreyer and Falconetti in Joan of Arc.
While I would have recommended Woyzeck anyway, especially if you're
just getting into Herzog's work, this scene alone makes it almost
mandatory for many movie-buffs to seek it out. And as for Kinski, it's
arguable if this might be his finest non-epic film performance, as a
simple man completely torn in his mind, given to delusions of grandeur
and, actually delusions of the paranoid and depleted, and to a crushing
sense of loss that sends him to his conclusion. A+
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
The Story of Woyzeck
, 13 September 2008
Author:
eric_canalla from Mexico City
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Woyzeck: The fourth film of Werner Herzog that I watch and the fourth
film of Werner Herzog that I loved.
I didn't know that Woyzeck is based on a play, written by Georg Büchner
("has become one of the most performed and influential play in the
German theatre repertory", we can read this in its Wikipedia page),
however one can see that easily. This is a strange film; this film has
a very strange character. With this performance as Friedrich Johann
Franz Woyzeck I have seen only five performances of Klaus Kinski
(Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes, For A Few Dollars More, Nosferatu: Phantom
der Nacht, Les Fruits de la Passion and this one) so before watching
this film I do had an idea of what I could expect from Kinski, better I
do was expecting something really great from him and now I can write
that I had a surprise. This is a marvelous performance, I don't dare to
write that it is the absolute best performance of Kinski but you will
be amazed for sure. In this case the film is about him, he has to be
the "attraction", the one who will make you feel and he success. And he
changes a lot during the film, is a unique character study that shows a
man who was there to live as an inferior. He was a soldier who was
seeing as anything but not as a person. At one point everything
collapses inside his mind. There are few characters; we see the captain
(Wolfgang Reichmann) and the doctor (Willy Semmelrogge). Both are
similar characters, both will "help" for that collapse. Is clear that
both are ignorant about the consequences of their acts, mostly the
doctor who simply played with health of Woyzeck who does take the money
to his family, Marie (Eva Mattes) and his son. Marie felt something for
the drum major (Josef Bierbichler), she was doing something that will
take Woyzeck with the drum major who carries him without a single
problem. I write that Woyzeck changes and Kinski is amazing, we see
Woyzeck as the "inferior" always thinking in something else, always
nervous. Look how he moves and look at his eyes in the sequence when he
talks for the last time with Andres. The act of Woyzeck is represented
in the most memorable sequence of the film. It is an impressive
sequence, since the music to the expressions of Kinski to the meaning
itself. The madness was there always and it delivers a final detail
with a desperate Woyzeck inside the pond (of a quite town), the
paranoia was one of the expected things.
The beautiful photography is just another beautiful thing of this film.
I just realize about the fact that it is an awarded film in Cannes. Eva
Mattes won as best supporting actress. She is terrific, for me the best
of her scenes is that when she looks herself in the mirror. She even
tells a story that could be the story of her son. Now I really want to
watch The China Syndrome (James Bridges, 1979), I guess Jack Lemmon did
a perfect performance to be the best actor. Anyway, this one is a very
strange film. I loved it and from what I have seen is not one of the
most accessible films of Werner Herzog however I recommend Woyzeck to
any film lover out there.
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