OK I finally saw it, and it rocks so gd hard. My favorite Herzog documentary in years and its gotten ZERO attention. You can't even pirate it! I had to buy it on my aunt's cable box. The Kraffts really accomplished something special. Their photography and 16mm film is pure beauty and violence. There was a literal lava tornado - the coolest thing I've ever seen in a documentary.
I saw this film now thru my local educational provider - incredible footage. Like, the stuff the Krafft's photographed, well, visually, aesthetically, it makes Kubrick look like a *chump* Herzog is an incredible documentarian - brilliantly summoning classical musical cues to help imbue a Wagnerian sense of pathos and gravitas to the incredible adventure these people lived. Awe inspiring. Like somehow, the 70's was a time when the grainy 16 mm helped convey a life that was hyperreal, surreal. You watch this film and you realize against the backdrop of Starsky & Hutch episodes reminding you maybe you had to stop and put coins into a phone at a booth on the corner just to make a public call - how these troubadours endured - progenitors of today's stormchasers, perhaps. How they would have thrived even more were "socials" available to them in their heyday! RIP, Krafft's! You lived full lives and most will never life half as fully as what you lived.
The best piece of telly I've seen in quite awhile...superb ..stunning ..achingly beautiful. Thank you Werner Herzog you've done Katia and Maurice proud.
The documentary "Lives on fire" about Maurice and Katia was also a beautiful documentary with a very emotional ending, with a dark chorus. Aired on NGC in the years 1999 and 2000. This should be uploaded on youtube.
Hey Esh, do you have a Link for that Documentary? Cant find it. Would be a great Help for me If you could share that Link, Im writing a Bachelor Thesis on the Kraffts. Cheers!
@@ansgari833 i have been looking for this documentary for over 10 years over the internet........zero result. About 8 years ago it was aired on a canadian channel but the people i contacted told me it was not available online.......before that i found it on a entertainment company called Lagarde entertainment, a french tv company but i NEVER got a response from them after at least 5 requests for information....it is a real shame it is nowhere to be found, it was a magnificient documentary. One scene involved Katia and Maurice walking close to lava and the song "feeling hot hot hot". The end of the documentary was very etherical and emotional; you saw the beautiful footage Maurice made on Hawaii during the eruption which happened on his birthday which he mentioned in several docu's (that it was a gift from Pele). During this footage (with a black sky emphasising the lavaflows) there was a beautiful chorus which really fitted the horror and magic of the lavaflows. Then it ended with the text about their deaths on Mt. Unzen. Very sad ending. For me it was the first time i learned about their deaths. I was sad because i really was impressed by their passion, courage and what they achieved, it was a great shock to me. Which is why this documentary is special to me and i would love to see it again. ..........if Werner Herzog is reading this comment, please help us find it and release it on TH-cam, you probably have the contacts and means to find it, it must be somewhere, it was repeated quite many times on NGC around the years 2000. When and if i find out more i will contact you here. Good luck and sorry that i cant help you at this time.....Thanks for your message
There’s a Spotify playlist with the following: 1. Requiem Op. 48 (1998 Digital Remaster): V. Agnus Dei by Gabriel Fauré, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Victoria de los Ángeles, Choeurs Elisabeth Brasseurs, Henriette Puig-Roget, André Cluytens, Orchestre De La Société Des Concerts Du Conservatoire, Christopher Thorn 2. Tú Lo Decidiste by Ana Gabriel 3. Es Demasiado Tarde - Remasterizado by Ana Gabriel 4. Requiem, Op. 48: Introit et Kyrie by Gabriel Fauré, Lisa Beckley, Nicholas Gedge, Oxford Schola Cantorum, Oxford Camerata, Colm Carey, Jeremy Summerly 5. Messa da Requiem: Recordare by Giuseppe Verdi, Elena Filipova, Gloria Scalchi, Cesar Hernandez, Carlo Colombara, Hungarian State Opera Chorus, Hungarian State Opera Orchestra, Pier Giorgio Morandi 6. Mass in B Minor, BWV 232: Kyrie: Christe eleison (Soprano I and II) by Johann Sebastian Bach, Carolyn Sampson, Rachel Nicholls, Robin Blaze, Gerd Türk, Peter Kooij, Bach Collegium Japan Chorus, Bach Collegium Japan, Masaaki Suzuki 7. Requiem, Op. 48: Pie Jesu by Gabriel Fauré, Lisa Beckley, Nicholas Gedge, Oxford Schola Cantorum, Oxford Camerata, Colm Carey, Jeremy Summerly 8. Messa da Requiem: Lux aeterna by Giuseppe Verdi, Elena Filipova, Gloria Scalchi, Cesar Hernandez, Carlo Colombara, Hungarian State Opera Chorus, Hungarian State Opera Orchestra, Pier Giorgio Morandi 9. Tristan und Isolde: Act III Scene 3: Mild und leise wie er lachelt (Isolde, Melot, Marke) by Richard Wagner, Wolfgang Millgramm, Lennart Forsen, Hedwig Fassbender, Gunnar Lundberg, Magnus Kyhle, Martina Dike, John Erik Eleby, Ulrik Qvale, Royal Swedish Opera Chorus 10. Stabat Mater by Ernst Reijseger, Werner Herzog
It’s strangely difficult to find an exhaustive source, but the most detailed I could find came from a Spotify playlist. Spotify rather annoyingly won’t allow text to be selected/copied off their website, so I had to pull the source code and copy it out of the raw HTML, but here ya go: 1. Requiem Op. 48 (1998 Digital Remaster): V. Agnus Dei by Gabriel Fauré, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Victoria de los Ángeles, Choeurs Elisabeth Brasseurs, Henriette Puig-Roget, André Cluytens, Orchestre De La Société Des Concerts Du Conservatoire, Christopher Thorn 2. Tú Lo Decidiste by Ana Gabriel 3. Es Demasiado Tarde - Remasterizado by Ana Gabriel 4. Requiem, Op. 48: Introit et Kyrie by Gabriel Fauré, Lisa Beckley, Nicholas Gedge, Oxford Schola Cantorum, Oxford Camerata, Colm Carey, Jeremy Summerly 5. Messa da Requiem: Recordare by Giuseppe Verdi, Elena Filipova, Gloria Scalchi, Cesar Hernandez, Carlo Colombara, Hungarian State Opera Chorus, Hungarian State Opera Orchestra, Pier Giorgio Morandi 6. Mass in B Minor, BWV 232: Kyrie: Christe eleison (Soprano I and II) by Johann Sebastian Bach, Carolyn Sampson, Rachel Nicholls, Robin Blaze, Gerd Türk, Peter Kooij, Bach Collegium Japan Chorus, Bach Collegium Japan, Masaaki Suzuki 7. Requiem, Op. 48: Pie Jesu by Gabriel Fauré, Lisa Beckley, Nicholas Gedge, Oxford Schola Cantorum, Oxford Camerata, Colm Carey, Jeremy Summerly 8. Messa da Requiem: Lux aeterna by Giuseppe Verdi, Elena Filipova, Gloria Scalchi, Cesar Hernandez, Carlo Colombara, Hungarian State Opera Chorus, Hungarian State Opera Orchestra, Pier Giorgio Morandi 9. Tristan und Isolde: Act III Scene 3: Mild und leise wie er lachelt (Isolde, Melot, Marke) by Richard Wagner, Wolfgang Millgramm, Lennart Forsen, Hedwig Fassbender, Gunnar Lundberg, Magnus Kyhle, Martina Dike, John Erik Eleby, Ulrik Qvale, Royal Swedish Opera Chorus 10. Stabat Mater by Ernst Reijseger, Werner Herzog
They look like passionate and dedicated individuals pursuing their life’s work with a zeal most of us will likely never share. One that has saved countless lives and advanced a field of science considerably. Maybe Herzog documentaries aren’t quite your speed? It’s fine if that’s the case. They certainly aren’t for everyone.
OK I finally saw it, and it rocks so gd hard. My favorite Herzog documentary in years and its gotten ZERO attention. You can't even pirate it! I had to buy it on my aunt's cable box. The Kraffts really accomplished something special. Their photography and 16mm film is pure beauty and violence. There was a literal lava tornado - the coolest thing I've ever seen in a documentary.
Available on the BBC iPlayer.
It's up to pirate now fyi everyone.
th-cam.com/video/EfFBcjZBTbA/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=DocumentaryWhirl
You can pirate almost everything if you look hard enough and you know where to look.
Its on tv ontario
This was one of the craziest documentaries I’ve ever seen. Left my jaw agape & speechless.
I saw a volcano live this summer in Iceland. Incredible way to learn about the power our planet contains.
I saw this film now thru my local educational provider - incredible footage. Like, the stuff the Krafft's photographed, well, visually, aesthetically, it makes Kubrick look like a *chump* Herzog is an incredible documentarian - brilliantly summoning classical musical cues to help imbue a Wagnerian sense of pathos and gravitas to the incredible adventure these people lived. Awe inspiring. Like somehow, the 70's was a time when the grainy 16 mm helped convey a life that was hyperreal, surreal. You watch this film and you realize against the backdrop of Starsky & Hutch episodes reminding you maybe you had to stop and put coins into a phone at a booth on the corner just to make a public call - how these troubadours endured - progenitors of today's stormchasers, perhaps. How they would have thrived even more were "socials" available to them in their heyday! RIP, Krafft's! You lived full lives and most will never life half as fully as what you lived.
The best piece of telly I've seen in quite awhile...superb ..stunning ..achingly beautiful. Thank you Werner Herzog you've done Katia and Maurice proud.
Watched this last night it was breathtaking o boy thanks for giving us the chance to see it 👏👏
The documentary "Lives on fire" about Maurice and Katia was also a beautiful documentary with a very emotional ending, with a dark chorus. Aired on NGC in the years 1999 and 2000. This should be uploaded on youtube.
Hey Esh, do you have a Link for that Documentary? Cant find it. Would be a great Help for me If you could share that Link, Im writing a Bachelor Thesis on the Kraffts. Cheers!
@@ansgari833 i have been looking for this documentary for over 10 years over the internet........zero result. About 8 years ago it was aired on a canadian channel but the people i contacted told me it was not available online.......before that i found it on a entertainment company called Lagarde entertainment, a french tv company but i NEVER got a response from them after at least 5 requests for information....it is a real shame it is nowhere to be found, it was a magnificient documentary. One scene involved Katia and Maurice walking close to lava and the song "feeling hot hot hot". The end of the documentary was very etherical and emotional; you saw the beautiful footage Maurice made on Hawaii during the eruption which happened on his birthday which he mentioned in several docu's (that it was a gift from Pele). During this footage (with a black sky emphasising the lavaflows) there was a beautiful chorus which really fitted the horror and magic of the lavaflows. Then it ended with the text about their deaths on Mt. Unzen. Very sad ending. For me it was the first time i learned about their deaths. I was sad because i really was impressed by their passion, courage and what they achieved, it was a great shock to me. Which is why this documentary is special to me and i would love to see it again. ..........if Werner Herzog is reading this comment, please help us find it and release it on TH-cam, you probably have the contacts and means to find it, it must be somewhere, it was repeated quite many times on NGC around the years 2000. When and if i find out more i will contact you here. Good luck and sorry that i cant help you at this time.....Thanks for your message
Non mais vous vous rendez compte de leur métier 😮
C'est incroyable 😮
jaw dropping sequences, I was left speechless....awesome film!
I think I saw these documentaries of this rad couple back in my school days
god dammit take me from my grocery job to the splattering maw of an erupting volcano
Just do it
I need this on Blu-ray
Brilliant TV and the music was perfect.
Does AIR do the soundtrack for this film or another one on the same topic?
There’s a Spotify playlist with the following:
1. Requiem Op. 48 (1998 Digital Remaster): V. Agnus Dei by Gabriel Fauré, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Victoria de los Ángeles, Choeurs Elisabeth Brasseurs, Henriette Puig-Roget, André Cluytens, Orchestre De La Société Des Concerts Du Conservatoire, Christopher Thorn
2. Tú Lo Decidiste by Ana Gabriel
3. Es Demasiado Tarde - Remasterizado by Ana Gabriel
4. Requiem, Op. 48: Introit et Kyrie by Gabriel Fauré, Lisa Beckley, Nicholas Gedge, Oxford Schola Cantorum, Oxford Camerata, Colm Carey, Jeremy Summerly
5. Messa da Requiem: Recordare by Giuseppe Verdi, Elena Filipova, Gloria Scalchi, Cesar Hernandez, Carlo Colombara, Hungarian State Opera Chorus, Hungarian State Opera Orchestra, Pier Giorgio Morandi
6. Mass in B Minor, BWV 232: Kyrie: Christe eleison (Soprano I and II) by Johann Sebastian Bach, Carolyn Sampson, Rachel Nicholls, Robin Blaze, Gerd Türk, Peter Kooij, Bach Collegium Japan Chorus, Bach Collegium Japan, Masaaki Suzuki
7. Requiem, Op. 48: Pie Jesu by Gabriel Fauré, Lisa Beckley, Nicholas Gedge, Oxford Schola Cantorum, Oxford Camerata, Colm Carey, Jeremy Summerly
8. Messa da Requiem: Lux aeterna by Giuseppe Verdi, Elena Filipova, Gloria Scalchi, Cesar Hernandez, Carlo Colombara, Hungarian State Opera Chorus, Hungarian State Opera Orchestra, Pier Giorgio Morandi
9. Tristan und Isolde: Act III Scene 3: Mild und leise wie er lachelt (Isolde, Melot, Marke) by Richard Wagner, Wolfgang Millgramm, Lennart Forsen, Hedwig Fassbender, Gunnar Lundberg, Magnus Kyhle, Martina Dike, John Erik Eleby, Ulrik Qvale, Royal Swedish Opera Chorus
10. Stabat Mater by Ernst Reijseger, Werner Herzog
I made a TH-cam playlist: music.th-cam.com/play/PLTfJl6yvCrtlkRXwhsW4N4l_iviSJ2PY1.html&feature=share
Werner Herzog is one of those Humans who takes their filmmaking passion to the Next Level, much like David Lynch.
Fantastic doc. Just saw it on swedish public service
Mesmerising film helped along by very astute juxtaposition of vision and music.
Absolutely brilliant piece of work. I’m trying to find out what the music used in it was.
@Clive Hoey hello Clive. Thank you very much. I don’t use I player but will find someone who does.
Requiem, Op. 48: Introit et Kyrie
The list of the music used is at the end of the documentary actually
Spotify playlist available too
anyone have a list of music used in this documentary? I love the songs
It’s strangely difficult to find an exhaustive source, but the most detailed I could find came from a Spotify playlist. Spotify rather annoyingly won’t allow text to be selected/copied off their website, so I had to pull the source code and copy it out of the raw HTML, but here ya go:
1. Requiem Op. 48 (1998 Digital Remaster): V. Agnus Dei by Gabriel Fauré, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Victoria de los Ángeles, Choeurs Elisabeth Brasseurs, Henriette Puig-Roget, André Cluytens, Orchestre De La Société Des Concerts Du Conservatoire, Christopher Thorn
2. Tú Lo Decidiste by Ana Gabriel
3. Es Demasiado Tarde - Remasterizado by Ana Gabriel
4. Requiem, Op. 48: Introit et Kyrie by Gabriel Fauré, Lisa Beckley, Nicholas Gedge, Oxford Schola Cantorum, Oxford Camerata, Colm Carey, Jeremy Summerly
5. Messa da Requiem: Recordare by Giuseppe Verdi, Elena Filipova, Gloria Scalchi, Cesar Hernandez, Carlo Colombara, Hungarian State Opera Chorus, Hungarian State Opera Orchestra, Pier Giorgio Morandi
6. Mass in B Minor, BWV 232: Kyrie: Christe eleison (Soprano I and II) by Johann Sebastian Bach, Carolyn Sampson, Rachel Nicholls, Robin Blaze, Gerd Türk, Peter Kooij, Bach Collegium Japan Chorus, Bach Collegium Japan, Masaaki Suzuki
7. Requiem, Op. 48: Pie Jesu by Gabriel Fauré, Lisa Beckley, Nicholas Gedge, Oxford Schola Cantorum, Oxford Camerata, Colm Carey, Jeremy Summerly
8. Messa da Requiem: Lux aeterna by Giuseppe Verdi, Elena Filipova, Gloria Scalchi, Cesar Hernandez, Carlo Colombara, Hungarian State Opera Chorus, Hungarian State Opera Orchestra, Pier Giorgio Morandi
9. Tristan und Isolde: Act III Scene 3: Mild und leise wie er lachelt (Isolde, Melot, Marke) by Richard Wagner, Wolfgang Millgramm, Lennart Forsen, Hedwig Fassbender, Gunnar Lundberg, Magnus Kyhle, Martina Dike, John Erik Eleby, Ulrik Qvale, Royal Swedish Opera Chorus
10. Stabat Mater by Ernst Reijseger, Werner Herzog
I’ve made a TH-cam playlist: music.th-cam.com/play/PLTfJl6yvCrtlkRXwhsW4N4l_iviSJ2PY1.html&feature=share
No way. Life Aquatic wasn’t a spoof of Cousteau. It was a spoof of an unintended spoof of Cousteau.
R.I.P
in torrent
They look unstable
@Matt yea, humanly unstable
It's an unstable environment. Lol
Something is wrong with you if you aren't
@@vishnu2407 not like these two
They look like passionate and dedicated individuals pursuing their life’s work with a zeal most of us will likely never share. One that has saved countless lives and advanced a field of science considerably. Maybe Herzog documentaries aren’t quite your speed? It’s fine if that’s the case. They certainly aren’t for everyone.