For Conservative Movie Lovers: Werner Herzog, Timothy Treadwell, and ‘Grizzly Man’ Part 4
by Leo Grin“Have mercy on the souls in purgatory, and especially on those that are most forsaken. Do Thou deliver them from the dire torments they endure. Call them, and admit them to Thy most sweet embrace in paradise.”
Devout Catholics might recognize this as a prayer for those lost souls who, as penance for the sins committed in life, have not yet ascended to heaven. Others might view it as just another silly superstition in desperate need of squashing by the enlightened mythbusters of our time.
As stated earlier, in his teen years Herzog had a deeply affecting flirtation with Catholicism that has echoed down throughout his life. “I have always thought of my films as really being one big work that I have been concentrating on for forty years,” he says. “The characters in this story are all desperate and solitary rebels. . . They know their rebellion is doomed to failure, but they continue without respite, wounded, struggling on their own without assistance.” Herzog maintains, and I agree, that when the history of his career is written Grizzly Man “will be a centerpiece” of his canon. But it was only after many viewings that it occurred to me (a veteran of eight years of Catholic grade school) that one of Grizzly Man’s chief virtues is that it’s a supremely decent film, acting as a kind of extended novena for the lost soul of Timothy Treadwell.
Treadwell came into Herzog’s sights only ten months after his death, by such chance that non-superstitious readers may be excused for judging it dumb luck. As Herzog tells it:
I stumbled across his story in the office of a producer who’s been very kind with me, helping me with another film. I had my car keys misplaced, looked at his table, at his messy table, and he believed I was looking at something in particular and shoves an article across and says, “We are doing a fantastic story.”
And I read it, rushed back in his office and I asked him, “Who is directing it?” And he said, “I’m kind of directing it.”
Kind of directing it.
And I looked him in the eye, and I saw some sort of hesitation. And with my German accent I said to him, “No, I vill direct dis moovie!”
Grizzly Man was made lightning fast: only fourteen shooting days and a mere nine days of editing — less than a month from commitment to final cut. “I just took over,” Herzog says. “I was totally convinced I was in the right place. No one else sometimes will have this kind of religious certainty.” He quickly went out and shot Treadwell’s friends, parents, and Alaskan haunts, even before seeing any of the dead man’s own footage. Instead, assistants back in Los Angeles sifted through the one-hundred hours of tapes, following specific instructions on things to look for.
When Herzog returned to LA and finally began scrutinizing the cream of the crop, he was, “completely astonished by what I found there: the depth of his story and the turmoil and the demons that haunted him and all his ecstasies. I was really blessed.”
It quickly grew apparent that this would be a film primarily about human nature. Herzog saw “something volatile, something broken, something dark, something inexplicably wild” in Treadwell’s eyes. “There are moments where he’s paranoid, moments where he’s grandiose, moments where he’s kind of defeated, where he’s star-like. He is quintessentially human, with all the defects of a human being, like all of us.” He was also amazed at the “grandiose beauty” of the Alaskan landscapes Treadwell had captured on his prosumer video camera.
As the editing progressed like wildfire, Herzog frantically wrote and recorded his narration, giving us an almost stream-of-consciousness look into what he was thinking and feeling upon viewing the footage for the first time. All the while, he manipulated material to his own purposes without fear. “You shouldn’t be a fly on the wall,” he says about making documentaries. “Be the hornet that moves in and that stings. . . Take charge of a situation, stylize it, create something, fantasize about it.”
That philosophy granted him the vision to unearth crucial shots from Treadwell’s videos, brief vignettes that rank among the most memorable in the film. “Sometimes I do discover footage that is amazing,” Herzog says, “and nobody sees the deep poetry in it.” In one wonderful clip, a fox puts its paws on the outside of a tent, and from within Treadwell playfully scratches its soles. “[The camera] is so bouncy that it was never considered by those who assisted me,” Herzog says, “and I think it is the most beautiful of any footage I’ve ever seen, so I used it. I think Treadwell would have overlooked it in the same way.”
YouTube -- click here to watch in full-screen HD
In another shot, Herzog noticed the haunting beauty of reeds swaying in the wind after Treadwell left the frame, and took the opportunity to dwell on the powerful yet subtle forces that course through the natural world, things Treadwell missed entirely in his rush to be the star of the show.
YouTube -- click here to watch in full-screen HD
The final film ended up evenly split between Treadwell’s footage and Herzog’s own, with the director’s calm, rational sensibility and eagle-eye proving a perfect match for Treadwell’s eclectic assortment of images and emotions.
As the movie came together a grand argument manifested itself, pitting Treadwell’s naïve adoration of nature (and equally naïve hatred of humanity’s intrusions into the wild) against Herzog’s gloomy pessimism built up over forty years of exploring jungles and wild lands. To the well-traveled director, Treadwell epitomized, “the Disney-ization of wild nature, which I really resent.” In Alaska, Herzog sought out the famed Grizzly Maze. “I was filming at the spot where [the tragedy] happened,” he says. “I even met some of the bears. I don’t find them fluffy, I don’t find them lovable.”
Meanwhile, throughout Treadwell’s own footage Herzog saw things that made him cringe. “It is not the right thing to walk up to a very big bear and touch his nose with your finger. . . It is questionable how much you protect a 1,200 pound grizzly bear by standing three feet away from him. . . There’s over and over and over moments where he steps right in the middle of the bears at arm’s length and sings to them and tells them how much he loves them. And I think that is wrong. You should not love the bears; you should respect them. Keep your distance and respect them.”
But even Herzog’s most stinging critiques are tinged with kindness. “It is not a nasty argument,” he stressed in interviews about the film. “It is in the same way that I argue with my brother who I love. . . I think I did have an instant rapport with Treadwell and an understanding to a certain depth of his person and character.”
There are two Herzogs at war in this film, as in all of his others: the hard-bitten realist versus the man who walked five-hundred miles in the daft hope that God might spare the life of his friend and mentor. In perhaps the most-quoted line of Grizzly Man, Herzog opines that the overwhelming nature of the universe is “chaos, hostility, and murder.” But look again at the shots in the picture that emit small flashes of “ecstatic truth.” They are not primarily ones that highlight “chaos, hostility, and murder,” but rather their exact opposites: order, serenity, life.
This is Herzog the spiritualist talking to us, someone who appreciates the capacity of human beings — even misguided, doomed ones — to in their own way stave off the darkness of the unfeeling universe, and attempt to carve out something good and noble amongst the vast sea of chaos, hostility, and murder that surrounds us. It is this aspect of the director that gets lost in the rush to declare him a megalomaniacal gloom-and-doomer. A few years ago, following a screening of one of his films, he was asked a pointed question: if he thinks the universe is made up of “chaos and hostility and murder,” how is it that one finds so much beauty in his work? Herzog’s cheeky answer? “Well, I stem the tide.”
In his first days making Grizzly Man, all the involved parties — production company, distributor, and TV Network — informed Herzog that they wanted his film to feature snatches of the surviving audio recording of Treadwell and Huguenard’s deaths, in the hope that the resulting sensationalism would pump up box-office receipts and TV ratings. But for Herzog — a director who often says “the poet must never avert his eyes” — there were deeper considerations. “I have a sensitivity towards audiences,” he says. “I do not like violence, graphic violence on the screen, in particular when it is violence against the defenseless. So I do not want to see in graphic detail the murder of a child. I do not want to see in graphic detail the rape of a woman.”
When he first listened to the tape of Treadwell’s brutal end, he judged it “horrifying. . . beyond all description. I’ve never heard anything like this.” Later he viewed the coroner’s photos and found them even worse. “It was instantly clear,” he said later, “Number one, I’m not going to do a snuff movie. Number two, there is such a thing as dignity and privacy of an individual’s death. So you just do not show it, you just do not do it. And I said, ‘Only over my dead body is this going to end up in the film’.”
His solution to the ethical problem posed by the death tape was inspired. In Grizzly Man, he offers the audience only a shot of himself, his back to the camera, listening to the tape on headphones. The sound is for his ears alone, but facing us in the same frame is Treadwell’s close friend Jewel Palovak. “She’s trying to read my face,” Herzog says, explaining that she becomes to the audience “like almost a mirror image of my face. . . It has great intensity and great anguish.” As Herzog recoils at what he hears, the emotions playing across her features tell us all we need to know about the horrors we (and she) are spared. It’s a deeply humane way of handling the issue. In this day and age, how many directors would resist using the easy shock value of recorded death-screams to juice up their film?
So many documentarians, both in books and on screen, are little more than rats who live on a mixture of sensationalism and bias. They demonize their subjects, ruthlessly cut interviews out of context, and slime innocent people under a pretense of objectivity. It’s fairly astounding that — given his profound disagreements with Treadwell’s philosophy — Herzog time and again treats his protagonists fairly, and finds numerous ways to leave the grieving survivors better than when he found them. By the time Grizzly Man stages an ashes-scattering ceremony for Treadwell’s friends, Herzog is no longer just telling a story or making profound points about Life and Nature: he’s marshaling his talents to the task of healing wounds. This is Godly work, and it is good to see.
Of course, the most grievous wounds of all belonged to Treadwell himself. A less fertile mind than Herzog’s might have deemed the dead man far beyond any sort of help. But as you watch the end of Grizzly Man, consider again that Catholic prayer for the dead I quoted above.
In an old 1984 TV documentary called The Dark Glow of the Mountains, Herzog relates a strangely beautiful fantasy he’s long held: a desire to one day head off toward the distant horizon, just walking and walking until the world ends. “I like the idea of just disappearing,” he said later when questioned about this dream. “Walking away, turning down the path and just carrying on until there is no more path to follow. I would like to have Huskies with leather saddlebags and just walk and walk until there is no road left.”
That is, of course, exactly the fate he bestows upon poor Timothy Treadwell in the last shots of Grizzly Man. Using the dead man’s own footage, Herzog sends Treadwell’s ghost off into the gorgeous Alaskan wilderness, followed first by his fox friends and later by a pair of genial bears, seemingly free of all the horrors and indignities that he brought upon himself and his causes in life. By melding these poignant videos to his own long-held fantasy of what would constitute a beautiful death, the director uses the poetic powers of cinema to suggest absolution and forgiveness. It’s as if Herzog has plucked a doomed soul out of an ocean of chaos and darkness and pointed it toward heaven.
Have mercy on the souls in purgatory, and especially on those that are most forsaken. Do Thou deliver them from the dire torments they endure. Call them, and admit them to Thy most sweet embrace in paradise.
What shall we call this Elysium we see on-screen as Grizzly Man fades to black, this magnificent Alaskan wilderness where Treadwell’s shade is allowed to escape its earthly torments, finding a heavenly peace among his beloved bears?
You have my leave to argue, but I’d just as soon call it God’s Country.
This concludes our look at Werner Herzog and his sublime masterpiece Grizzly Man. Come back next Saturday as For Conservative Movie Lovers begins studying an all-new film from an all-new year, only at Big Hollywood.
Previous posts in the series “Werner Herzog, Timothy Treadwell, and Grizzly Man“
FURTHER READING and VIEWING
Grizzly Man is an easy movie to find, so there’s no excuse not to do your solemn FCML duty and watch it. You can buy it as low as $8.99 at Amazon, or for $3-$5 used at any number of places. If renting is your game, head on over to Netflix and pop it into your queue. Whatever you do, get ahold of it and give it a whirl. If money is no object, there’s a Blu-ray version available for a ridiculous $45.99. Have fun.







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107 Comments
Very nice article!
I'm kinda pulling this from thin air but when I read this: "And I think that is wrong. You should not love the bears; you should respect them. Keep your distance and respect them.”
I thought of this exchange from The Wind and the Lion (which I saw for the first time just last month):
Theodore Roosevelt: "The American grizzly is a symbol of the American character: strength, intelligence, ferocity. Maybe a little blind and reckless at times… but courageous beyond all doubt. And one other trait that goes with all previous."
2nd Reporter: "And that, Mr. President?"
Theodore Roosevelt: "Loneliness. The American grizzly lives out his life alone. Indomitable, unconquered – but always alone. He has no real allies, only enemies, but none of them as great as he."
2nd Reporter: "And you feel this might be an American trait?"
Theodore Roosevelt: "Certainly. The world will never love us. They respect us – they might even grow to fear us. But they will never love us, for we have too much audacity! And, we're a bit blind and reckless at times too."
Again, just a random thought but, like so much of this stuff, I simply thought it was… interesting.
Loved the whole look at Herzog, who is awesome, and his thinking on his subject in a great work of art and film-making. Thank you. ;0)
Enormous thanks, Leo, for this series. Your research is very admirable and the entertaining way you tell the tale is great. Can't wait for your next series!
Thank you, Leo. This was a magnificent series.
Excellent series, Leo. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.
Bravo! At last we are starting to forge the superior cultural criticism needed to break the leftist ascendancy.
Absolutely brilliant series of articles. Thanks so much!
I really enjoyed your in depth look at Herzog and at Grizzly Man. I was very moved by the movie, the scenes you shared here are the ones I remember most.
You've put into words what I couldn't. Thanks to both you and Werner Herzog for a job well done.
Nice post there, And well Brian Kieth gave the best screen performance of TR ever, then again the Movie was written and Directed by John Millius, he is one of the least know and better Directors out there and dose not work much. To bad for us. Those four or five lines spell out pretty much who we are as Americans and as a Nation. As for Herzog, I liked his stuff for a long time now, And since this review, I plan on owning all of his movies and documentries. I was surprised by how short of time it took to put Grizzly Man together. 33 days, you could read a lot into that , 33 teeth in your mouth 33 vertbra in you back, 33rd degree of Free Masons ( I am a freemason) 33 years how old Jesus was when he followed his destiny. like I said you could really read a lot into it. Herzog is just very very good at what he dose, I don't think anyone else could have made this one. As for Treadwell, I spent time in that part of the world, after the event and he is not though of very highly by any one in the area. A lost soul to be sure, never the less. In Alaska its very common to just go missing. And its very easy to do.
Thank you for a fantastic series of articles on Herzog. Even Dwarfs Started Small has been one of my favorite films for years, but I didn't know about the leftist backlash you detailed. You have prompted me to watch Herzog's films and enjoy them all again with a fresh viewpoint. Why don't you expand this series into a book? I would be a buyer!
I'm so bummed this series is over.
What a splendid read each week.
I can't wait for the next series.
That Herzog wove as much sympathy as he did into his opus is nothing short of amazing. Treadwell himself was a piece of work even before he became an "eco-warrior", a pathological liar and spoiled brat whose Darwin Award-worthy death was something he himself had engineered. And like Herzog, I object strongly to the Disney-fication of the Wild. But the director's treatment of what he had been handed is nothing short of commendable. I will certainly see this film at the first opportunity.
3 things I remember from seeing that movie 5 years ago. Towards the beginning – when the pathologist is showing a little stainless steel tray holding what was left of "Mr Treadwell" – what a powerful visual.
Then throughout the movie seeing him rant and rave against people and how he was there to protect his "friends" – I thought – what an arrogant, raving lunatic. He didn't respect these animals.
And finally as was mentioned they way Werner handled the tape of his death. By listening to it by himself one got a feeling of the horrific nature of it but by not hearing it yourself the voyeuristic aspect was not shown (as Leo said).
A wonderful tribute to Werner, Leo.
BTW occasionally I will try and click on these embedded YouTube videos and learn that they have been disabled – embedded not allowed.
Why is that? These are disabled. Who requests that they be disabled?
Wonderful quote! Although with the battles of left vs right I think the bear these days is a bit schizo (as seen by the world)
Leo, I echo the thanks and praise from other readers for this wonderful series. Just amazing work. Bravo.
As I was raised Catholic, I appreciate your weaving of 'praying for souls in purgatory' into the piece. I was able to reflect on Timothy Treadwell and 'Grizzly Man' in a way I hadn't when I first discovered the film.
As I wrote in an earlier comment, I believe in week one of the series, the scene between Herzog and Jewel Palovak is one of the most powerful in the film. You hit the right notes in relating to Herzog's choices in bringing these moments to the screen. I can't think of another director, other than Werner Herzog, who would have been able to serve this material with such grace and dignity.
Thank you again Leo. I look forward to your next work.
[...] the original here: For Conservative Movie Lovers: Werner Herzog, Timothy Treadwell, and ‘Grizzly Man’ Part 4 This entry is filed under America – Blogs, Big Hollywood. You can follow any responses to this [...]
Twizzle…
Great writing style, love the post…
Yea I know what you mean, just a few miles west of King Salmon, there is just a little hill, an DC3/47 smacked it in 1942 killed every one on board, mostly nurses and some USO People a fellow that was suppose to be on that airplane was Bob Hope. It was a staging area for the fight down the Allusians Islands, The IJA invaded and Maj Gen Simon Bolivar Buckner was tasked with destroying them,Little side show of the Midway Sea Battle. It was hard on both airplanes and the soldiers, lost more due to weather than to bullets. I was up in King Salmon last in 2005
wow. I loved that movie "The Wind and the Lion".
I know King Salmon quite well. We flew into there to take a float plane to Brooks Camp. There they teach you "bear etiquette" – how to walk among the bears – something Treadwell never got. (hint: Make a lot of constant noise).
As I recall King Salmon had about 20 buildings -
I would imagine either a) the person who actually owns the copyright to the material and didn't give permission for its use (in this case the film company), or b) something YouTube does to get you to go to their site and watch it, thus driving up their own site traffic?
I thought the Catholic Church said Purgatory didn't exist anymore? Not trying to be disrespectful, just wondering.
Leo, great series. Enjoy your thoughts. You should read some of the comments on the DVD on Amazon.com where most people gave 4 to 5 stars but the 2 star people all complained that Herzog did not include the "death footage " or audio of Treadwell getting mauled??!!! I admire Herzog's restraint, sensitivity and caring by not including the audio/video/ autopsy pics. Folks like us ( conservatives/ right wingers…) beleive in limits , restraint and dammit decorum. You would put that awful stuff on a video so his family and friends can see/listen to and relive? Herzog said no. Decent guy.
It is amazing how restrained he was not using the tape of the bear attack. As horrific and blood curdling as it must have been, most people have a morbid curiosity and many more probably would have seen the movie had he put it in.
I really enjoyed the music Richard Thompson performed for this movie as well.
One of the myriad HD channels I didn't know I had is running the "Grizzly Diaries," repackaged Treadwell footage that only confirms what an astoundingly lucky (for a while) idiot he was. $45 for the Blu-Ray?? Does it come with a bear cub??! Great job, Leo! Looking forward to the next one!
(and your comments in another thread much appreciated)
I'm sorry you got so few comments over the course of this series. It was excellent, moving, challenging, and respectful – BOTH of a difficult subject and the artist who brought it to light. This last installment was just stellar writing. Big Hollywood could use more of you.
Still, I cannot watch this film – I heard Herzog's early interviews about it on NPR a couple of years ago, and I just can't bring myself to go there. Maybe someday. Thanks for going there for me.
Easy enough to check for yourself:
http://forums.catholic.com/showthread.php?t=42912...
I remember when I was up there George – about 5 years ago – they recently found a large plane – DC3 or DC6 – that had crashed into a mountain some 40-50 years ago. Most people "ourtside" really have no concept of the siae of Alaska – but if superimposed on the continental US th tip of the Aleutians to the panhandle – would cover the entire length of the US.
I think – when Treadwell was alive, the Alaskans regarded him with some amusement.
When you see a Herzog documentary like Grizly Man you reallly notice for the first time how much other "documentary" filmmakers insert their own point of view or agenda into a film. Herzog is marvelous, he is very respectful to Tredwell's friends, but never buys into their messiah complex they have at the end of the day. At the end of it I found myself really "understanding" tredwells mindset. You sort of pity him, becuase you can see the trainweck that is coming, the one that he couln't because of his own delusions. Yet at the same time that you are finding him a sypathetic character, it's always clear to the rational observer that Tredwell is completly insane. Herzog walked a real tightrope of getting you into the mind of the subject without getting sucked into a false admiration. This is especilly impressive when the subject cannot be confronted and a lot of the people who knew him best have an almost cult like devotion to him. This should be required viewing at any film school.
Bill_Brandt says,
"BTW occasionally I will try and click on these embedded YouTube videos and learn that they have been disabled — embedded not allowed (including the ones in this article)"
This relates to the myriad copyright filters and regulations in place on YouTube. These days they now have the capability to scan the movie I upload, identify it as coming from a copyrighted source, and then follow the pre-programmed wishes of the copyright holder.
I had some great SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT videos that I couldn't post at all because NBC's copyright rules on YouTube are so draconian. Luckily with GRIZZLY MAN, it let me post the videos I wanted, but added a copyright notice and the "embedded not allowed" thing. To view the videos above, just click on the "WATCH ON YOUTUBE" link, and you'll be transferred to their site to watch the video (and view the ads, which is why they don't let you view it embedded here at Big Hollywood, because here you wouldn't see the YouTube ads they've attached to the video).
Thank you, Mr. Grin, for such a thoughtful, insightful and articulate series. I felt like I was at a film school lecture and sad to have it end. As sick at heart as power politcs and the small, divisive minds that often seem to lead us – it is good to avert our gaze and find the poetry in life. I found your presentation of Herzog to be an inspiration.
Hi George – I remember flying into King Salmon from Anchorage on an Alaska Air 737 – waiting in a bar with a pool table (could have been the set for Northern Exposure!) – waiting for the float plane.
Brooks Camp is interesting – I think it is the smallest Federal Park – accessible only by float plane – and you are picked by a lottery – but once you get there first thing is going to a small log cabin theater where you watch a movie on "bear etiquette" – how to act around them.
What the Alaskans call brown bears I think we call Grizzlies – in any event their "brown bear" is a lot bigger than ours (California).
Remember seeing the one in the Anchorage airport – I think it was 10-12' high!
The bears there are more interested in feeding on salmon than you – if you leave them alone – make a lot of noise so they know you are in the area –
But to get to one part of the river or another you follow the "bear highway" – the same paths they follow.
With all that being said there are still plenty of stupid people – some bears were swimming under the footbridge – about a foot of clearance between the bridge and the water and despite a ranger screaming at these Swiss tourists to move they pretended that they "no habla" and stood there taking pictures – I have a dozen "dumb people" stories around wildlife in my travels – but Mr Treadwell has to be the top one!~
paganism feels real when you see a brown bear. a pagan will see a god and that is hard to argue with standing in front of a brown bear.
very well stated.
Excellent ending, Leo! I'll be re-reading and thinking about this series for a while.
And just a reminder how lessons are not learned:
http://www.aolnews.com/nation/article/bear-bites-...
You know that the Quinnat Landing Hotel burned down! Like a lot of things out there my guess Arson. You fish or just watch bears? I don't even like being anywhere near the things myself unless I have a 338 or 375 handy. They are just to dam dangerous to mess with. The spend the whole time out of the dens eating, blacks too. The last thing you ever want to do in life is to run into one just out of the den. Small place, 14 miles of paved road and an Airport that is almost 9000 feet long. USAF use to base F-15's there they don't anymore. The Quinnat was that big 50 or 75 room hotel bar resturant. That that weird woman managed. Talk about a piece of work.
I know that Bar you are talking about. Yea Northern Exposure. Well Alaskan Brown Bear is nothing more than a really well fed Grizzly. All they do is eat, fight, eat, make little brown bears eat fight and sleep that is it.
This series has been a joy. That seems so odd to say considering two people died, but then Werner makes the movie healing for the audience too; never do I feel voyeuristic or exploitative. A true filmmaker. A writer. You are an enlightening and entertaining pair.
Thank you for such a great series. I have enjoyed viewing Herzog's work throught out the years. I'm also currently reading Conquest of the Useless, an acccount of his experience in Peru filming Fitzcarraldo – utterly amazing.
Thanks again Leo. Can't wait for the new series.
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