Ace wrote:Radio_Birdman wrote:Ace wrote:Herzog's Aguirre is my favorite film, or if it isn't it is certainly up there, but he cannot make a good movie without another person. Be it Kinski (the best), Bruno S., or Deiter Dengler, Herzog isn't self sufficient like, let's say, Fassbinder, who I think is the most talented of the German new Wave directors.
As for Wim Wenders? Maybe if all of his movies were cut in half. He has Bruno Ganz and Nick Cave going for him, but the rest? zzzzzzzzzzz...
Obviously you haven't seen
Kings of the Road. It is still better than any Herzog combined.
oh i've seen kings of the road. and no way is it better than
Nosferatu. sorry.
I think you are too quick to dismiss Wenders. Both Herzog and Wenders have such polar opposite styles, I won't attempt to pick one over the other, a matter of personal tase I suppose.
Exluding his shorts, documentaries and music videos/ concert films, Wenders had a solid body of feature films in the seventies and eighties:
Summer in the City, The Goalie's Anxiety at the Penalty Kick, The Scarlet Letter, Alice in the Cities, Wrong Movement, Kings of the Road, The American Friend, The State of Things, Hammett, Paris, Texas (Harry Dean Stanton, need I say more) Wings of Desire.
The nineties to the present has been a little more uneven. Until the End of the World, Faraway, So Close!, Lisbon Story, The End of Violence, The Million Dollar Hotel, Land of Plenty and Don't Come Knocking. I haven't seen the last three and "Knocking" seems to echo Paris, Texas. Not surprising it was written by Sam Shepard.
Herzog had a good run from Signs of Life to Fitzcarraldo. Where the Green Ants Dream, Cobra Verde and Scream of Stone however were average at best. I haven't seen Invincible or his most recent one Rescue Dawn.
Fassbinder is certainly the best of this esteemed group. The most varied and original. Volker Schlöndorff was uneven at best. Don't care for his later Hollywood efforts.
"A cynic is a man who, when he smells flowers, looks around for a coffin."
H. L. Mencken
Kaboom!