There’s a scene in ‘Cave of Forgotten Dreams’ where
the screen is filled with a computer-mapped image of the interior of Chauvet
Cave in southern France – home to a veritable art gallery’s worth of
pre-historic cave paintings – while Herzog delivers an unusually ordinary bit
of expository voiceover. Cut to one of the technicians responsible for the
mapping, sitting at a desk, computer in front of him, discussing the mapping
work. Again, it’s all very typical of a documentary opening with the History
Channel’s logo. Then the technician happens to mention that he comes from a
non-scientific background; Herzog interrupts him and asks what he did before;
the man gives a self-conscious grin and answers that he was in the circus. And
– bingo! – we’re in Herzog territory good and proper.
While ‘Cave of Forgotten Dreams’ – haunting music and
dream-like meditations on the unknowable past notwithstanding – is one of the
more orthodox entries on Herzog’s CV, it’s still the kind of film that only
Herzog could have made. The chance to film, in strictly regimented conditions
and with an almost draconian time limit, an area that will never been seen
except by a handful of scientific experts must have been irresistible to modern
cinema’s most passionate explorer. The historic importance of the paintings was
established very shortly after their discovery in 1994 and the cave was
immediately sealed off. Restrictions around access were imposed to preserve the
cave’s climate and conditions. Herzog and a crew of just three had to use
battery powered equipment and use lighting which gave off no heat.
Sure, it’s not as crazy as the “hey, there’s a small
island that might just get blown to shit by an active volcano, why not let’s
fly in?” aesthetic of ‘La Soufriere’, but there’s that same sense of race-against-time
filmmaking at work. Oh yeah, and he shot it in 3-D as well. (Full
disclosure/bone of contention: ‘Cave of Forgotten Dreams’ came and went in
Nottingham cinemas in something slightly faster than the blink of an eye. I’ve
only seen it on DVD in bog standard 2D. It still rankles that I didn’t get to
see it on the big screen and in the original format. I think it would have
proved cinema’s only genuinely tactile use of the form.)
‘Cave of Forgotten Dreams’ is several things – the
least of which is a documentary about cave paintings. It’s about memory,
perception, dreams, and the passing of time. And it’s an act of liberation. It
takes the sealed Chauvet cave, wrests it from the hands of researchers and
academics, and makes a beautiful and richly textured gift of it to the world.
"I think it would have proved cinema’s only genuinely tactile use of the form."
ReplyDeleteIt did.