Werner Herzog, the German filmmaker, guided the students to create short films over 11 days.
Werner Herzog’s ‘Nomad’ Trailer: Auteur’s Latest Film Follows Life of ‘Kindred Spirit’ Bruce Chatwin。在《真理的未來》(The Future of Truth by Werner Herzog (Author), Michael Hofmann (Translator))旨在闡述他關於『狂喜真理』的指導理念,嘗試解答人類最深刻、最永恆的問題之一。我不認為真理是天空中一顆我們有一天會到達的北極星。它更像是一場永無止境的奮鬥。一場運動,一段充滿未知的旅程,充滿徒勞的探索。但正是這段通往未知、通往廣大暮色森林的旅程,賦予了我們的生命意義和目標;正是它將我們與田野裡的野獸區分開來。Werner Herzog’s book “The Future of Truth.” Werner Herzog names the greatest performer in cinema history: “There was a certain beauty” Buster Keaton. Klaus Kinski,
Werner Herzog’s ‘Nomad’ Trailer: Auteur’s Latest Film Follows Life of ‘Kindred Spirit’ Bruce Chatwin

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The Future of Truth Hardcover – September 30, 2025
by Werner Herzog (Author), Michael Hofmann (Translator)
For over half a century, Werner Herzog has challenged, enriched, and expanded our understanding of the truth. His films and books have mixed fiction and nonfiction, documentary and drama, reality and imagination. Invariably, Herzog goes beyond the appearance of what is true in search of a higher truth, or what he has often referred to as the “ecstatic truth.” In The Future of Truth, a great artist ventures an answer to one of humanity’s deepest, most eternal questions. At a moment when deepfake AI videos are proliferating, and most people have simply thrown up their hands in despair at the ubiquity of what we now know as fake news—not to mention the constant lying and propagandizing from certain public figures—Herzog seeks a remedy. Mixing memoir, history, politics, poetry, science, and fierce opinion, he writes with dazzling originality and panache, urging readers to be unflagging and imaginative in the pursuit of truth, endless though the quest may be:
I don’t think truth is some kind of polestar in the sky that we will one day get to. It’s more like an incessant striving. A movement, an uncertain journey, a seeking full of futile endeavor. But it is this journey into the unknown, into a vast twilit forest, that gives our lives meaning and purpose; it is what distinguishes us from the beasts in the fields.
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"Herzog is, as always, playing his own game. He is governed not by norms of inquiry, nor by any grandiose pragmatic theory about what truth is, but by the artist’s imperative of self- assured free association."
Sam Shpall reviews Werner Herzog’s book “The Future of Truth.” https://lareviewofbooks.org/....../herzog-in-the....../
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Werner Herzog names the greatest performer in cinema history: “There was a certain beauty”
Scott Campbell
Tue 3 December 2024 16:45, UK
Based on his reputation for being one of the most eccentric figures in cinema, which he’s earned by doing absolutely nothing other than being himself at all times, it’s not ridiculous to think that Werner Herzog would think outside of the box when it came to naming the greatest performer in cinema history.
After all, this is a prolific filmmaker equally adept and comfortable at narrative drama as they are a documentarian who used the money they made from appearing in Star Wars to fund a Japanese-language drama on a shoestring budget and has a habit of making even the most mundane of musings sound like poetry with his unmistakable intonations.
Herzog also has a bizarre obsession with chickens, ate a shoe on camera after losing a bet, got shot during a live television interview, and was embroiled in the industry’s ultimate love/hate relationship with Klaus Kinski, who was either his best friend or worst enemy depending entirely on what day of the week it was and whether or not they’d recently threatened – or attempted, as tended to happen – to kill each other.
His favourite Marlon Brando performance wasn’t in On the Waterfront, A Streetcar Named Desire, or The Godfather but Viva Zapata! he singled out character actor extraordinaire Michael Shannon as the finest talent of his generation and has a deep-seated affinity for Winnie the Pooh that transcends the barriers of pop culture, so it could realistically be anyone that Herzog could point to as the benchmark that every on-camera performer before or after has failed to reach.
On the other hand, it’s fitting that his candidate came to prominence a century ago when cinema was a much simpler and less technically driven place. Speaking to The New Yorker, Herzog lamented that “very young people not only watch a movie on their cellular phone” but “they also speed it up to twice the speed if it’s too slow for them.” Admittedly, that should be made illegal, but the filmmaker’s favoured star already looked like they moved much faster than the average person.
“There was a certain beauty,” he reminisced of the days when film was captured and conveyed at 18 frames per second, with the nostalgia almost palpable. “My favourite character in movies has been, and still is, Buster Keaton.” Comedy, or at least intentional comedy, has never been Herzog’s strongest suit, but nobody outside of Charlie Chaplin has ever come remotely close to perfecting the balance between slapstick, physicality, and humour better than the inimitable Keaton.
Even when he was putting his life on the line to perform increasingly dangerous stunts like a proto-Tom Cruise, Keaton would never break character. They called him ‘The Great Stone Face’ for a reason, and as a notoriously stoic and deadpan fellow himself, maybe that’s another reason why Herzog has never wavered from the groundbreaking actor being his definitive ideal of what a movie star should be.

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