Docufiction in Werner Herzog’s Recent Films

This presentation focuses on the work of filmmaker Werner Herzog, whose fiction and documentary films have long centred on figures operating under extreme conditions, often in hostile and remote environments. Herzog’s characters, while frequently testing the boundaries between creative imagination and illusion, remain reflective of the worlds and institutions that surround them. His films also consistently interrogate their own conditions of production, blurring distinctions between fiction and documentary and reflecting on the broader implications of film and media.
Jeroen Gerrits examines Herzog’s engagement with docufiction and digital media in documentaries from the past decade, including Grizzly Man (2005), Encounters at the End of the World (2007), and Cave of Forgotten Dreams (2010). Through encounters with extreme environments, ranging from Antarctica’s underwater world to prehistoric cave paintings and grizzly bear habitats, Herzog explores new modes of capturing the real using technologies that span scientific imaging devices, 3D cameras, and DIY recording tools.
Jeroen Gerrits is Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature at Binghamton University (SUNY). His research and teaching focus on the philosophy of film and new media, with particular attention to world cinema, complex narrative forms, and digital aesthetics. He is currently working on a book manuscript titled Cinematic Skepticism: Film Philosophy in World Cinema and Docufiction, which includes a chapter on Herzog.
Venue: Sazmanab (Khaghani St.)
Date: Saturday, 11 July 2015, 18:00


















