cover of episode Werner Herzog Isn't The 'Wild Guy' You Think He Is

Werner Herzog Isn't The 'Wild Guy' You Think He Is

2024/12/6
logo of podcast Fresh Air

Fresh Air

People
T
Terry Gross
W
Werner Herzog
Topics
韦纳·赫尔佐格认为,他电影作品中看似极端的情节并非真正的极端,而是象征性的隐喻,如同文学作品中的比喻手法,例如《白鲸》中的白鲸或《堂吉诃德》中的风车。他强调自己并非追求冒险或突破极限,而是一个纪律严明的专业人士,他注重安全,在80多部电影中没有演员受伤。他认为,为了深入探究人性,需要将人置于某种边缘状态。他童年在二战时期和战后的贫困环境中长大,这段经历培养了他对极端环境和人性的好奇心,而非恐惧。他认为自己是一个自律的专业人士,而非人们印象中的“野性之人”。他拒绝过度自我反省,认为过度回忆童年创伤并不健康。他坦然面对过往的错误和失败,并认为这些经历塑造了他。他自认为在整个电影行业中是唯一一个精神健全的人,并认为好莱坞的浮夸和表演性近乎疯狂。他与演员克劳斯·金斯基的合作,虽然充满挑战,但他成功地将金斯基的疯狂表演控制在屏幕内,最终呈现出具有独特艺术价值的电影作品。他强烈反对战争,对以色列和加沙的冲突表示谴责,但他同时表示,如果德国出现新纳粹政权,他会拿起武器反抗。他认为自己独特的叙事风格和声音特点深受观众喜爱,他在电影中扮演的反派角色纯属表演,并非其真实性格。他强调自己作品的真实性,而非虚构或特效。他目前正在从事写作和电影制作等工作,并拥有规律的作息,认为写作是轻松且高效的。 Terry Gross 采访了 Werner Herzog,探讨了他电影作品中极端元素的来源,以及他个人经历对其创作的影响。她提到了 Herzog 童年在二战时期和战后的经历,以及他与演员 Klaus Kinski 的合作。她还探讨了 Herzog 对战争和人性的看法,以及他如何看待自己作品中的极端元素。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

Why is Werner Herzog drawn to extreme characters, settings, and scenarios in his films?

Herzog sees these extremes as big metaphors and visions that allow for deep exploration of human nature and the soul. He believes that putting characters at an edge is necessary to reveal the darkest recesses of the human psyche.

How does Werner Herzog view his own sanity in the context of filmmaking?

Herzog claims to be the only clinically sane person in the entire filmmaking profession, citing his ability to make over 80 films without losing his wits or professionalism. He contrasts his sanity with the perceived insanity of Hollywood's red carpet events and performative statements.

What childhood experience shaped Werner Herzog's curiosity about the world?

At the age of two and a half, Herzog's mother woke him and his brother in the middle of the night to witness the distant city of Rosenheim on fire from bombing. This vivid memory of the vast inferno tracing the end of the world on the night sky sparked his curiosity about the dangerous and spectral world outside his tight valley.

How did Werner Herzog acquire self-discipline after a violent incident with his brother?

After stabbing his older brother in a fight, Herzog realized the need for self-discipline. He understood that controlling his wild impulses was crucial, leading to a disciplined approach in his life and career.

Why does Werner Herzog avoid psychoanalysis?

Herzog believes that excessive introspection and recalling childhood trauma can be unhealthy. He prefers to forget and bury past traumas rather than delve into them through psychoanalysis, which he sees as necessary only in very few cases.

What was the most serious incident involving Klaus Kinski on set?

Kinski once fired into a bamboo hut, causing a crew member to have part of his finger shot off. Herzog threatened Kinski, ensuring that no such incidents occurred again during their subsequent collaborations.

How did Werner Herzog react to being shot during a film shoot?

Herzog decided not to call the police after being shot, as he believed it would lead to unnecessary complications and disruptions. Instead, he continued filming at a safer location, demonstrating his pragmatic approach to handling dangerous situations.

What is Werner Herzog's stance on war and his potential involvement in one?

Herzog is against any war and believes it is terrible and unnecessary. However, he would fight if a neo-Nazi rebellion occurred in Germany, as he would not allow the barbarism of the Nazis to repeat.

What upcoming projects does Werner Herzog have?

Herzog is working on a new book titled 'The Future of Truth,' which will be released next spring in its German original format. He has also completed two films that are yet to be fully released and is involved in translating poetry by a Canadian writer.

Chapters
Werner Herzog discusses his attraction to extreme situations in his films and life, emphasizing his professionalism and discipline despite the perceived risk. He recounts childhood experiences during World War II and his film-making challenges, highlighting his focus on storytelling and exploring human nature.
  • Herzog's approach to filmmaking involves calculated risks, not reckless endangerment.
  • Despite his films' extreme settings, Herzog prioritizes safety and professionalism.
  • His childhood experiences during WWII shaped his curiosity about extreme situations.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

This message comes from Capital One. Your business faces unique challenges and opportunities. That's why Capital One offers a comprehensive suite of financial services backed by the strength of a top 10 commercial bank. Visit CapitalOne.com slash commercial. Member FDIC. This is Fresh Air. I'm Tanya Mosley.

Werner Herzog is a writer and director known for his unique approach to storytelling that often delves into the extremes, extreme personalities, predicaments, and places. Aguirre, The Wrath of God, follows a mad conquistador in the 16th century as he navigates the treacherous Amazon jungle. Then there's Fitzcarraldo, where Herzog tells the story of a European man living in Peru who becomes obsessed with bringing opera to the Amazon. And then there's the

To achieve his dream, he faces an incredible challenge, getting a steamship over a mountain to reach a river. It's a wild premise, and it's made even more intense by the performances of Klaus Kinski, who plays a madman in both films. Herzog has remarked that Kinski is not just acting, he was an actual madman in real life.

Kinski also starred in Herzog's haunting version of Nosferatu and appeared in the documentary Grizzly Man, which tells the tragic story of a man who lived among grizzly bears in Alaska, believing he was protecting them, until one day a bear eats him.

Herzog's own life has been shaped by extremes, too. Born in Munich during World War II, his mother rescued him as a baby from his crib, which was covered in shattered glass and debris after Allied bombs devastated nearby homes. His mother fled to a remote part of Bavaria for safety, where she raised him and his brother in poverty.

Throughout his life, Herzog has endured numerous injuries, ski jumping, and while making films. His cast and crew have faced their share of challenges, too.

Those who may not be familiar with Herzog's films often recognize him for his sinister roles in popular shows like Jack Reacher, The Mandalorian, and even The Simpsons. Today, Herzog divides his time between Los Angeles and Munich, and Terry Gross spoke to him last year. His memoir is now available in paperback. It's called Every Man for Himself and God Against All.

Werner Herzog, welcome back to Fresh Air. Thank you for having me again. Oh, it is always my pleasure. Do you know why you're attracted to extremes in your life and in your films? I don't see it that much as extremes. You see, when you move a ship over a mountain, it is doable. And I knew it was doable, although quite hard. But I think...

It is such a big metaphor. Like in literature, you have it, for example, the white whale, Moby Dick, in the hunt for it, or Don Quixote attacking the windmills with his lance. So there are big metaphors, a big vision out there. And then it doesn't matter if it's becoming difficult or not.

And of course, I disagree a little bit about what you said about risking things. Yes, I have risked personally things. I test the problems and the obstacles and the dangers. But in 80 or so films, not a single actor was ever injured, not one. So it's my proof that I must be circumspect, that I must be careful about.

Of course, sometimes crew members were hurt, but they would volunteer, even push me, for example, let's go through the rapids with a ship. And it's a big one, I mean, 320 tons. And if it crashes into the rocks, it has a momentum and a kinetic energy that's enormous. And of course, we...

Almost everyone who was on board for filming and they pushed me, let's go on board and let's film this. Almost everyone was injured. But that does happen and it's a risk that we knew and we accepted it. But my question still stands. Why do you think you're attracted to...

to making films that put you in risky situations and that put you in extreme situations. It's one thing to have in the film a metaphor like dragging a ship over a mountain, but it's another thing to actually have to do it in your film. At that point, it's not a metaphor. At that point, it's something your crew has to do.

I hear you, yes. But I'm not searching for finding my boundaries or something. The extreme mountain climbers do that. That's not my thing. I know my boundaries and I accept them and I take no as an answer, for example. And I'm a professional person. I'm a filmmaker and I want to come back with a film and I want to come back alive because I want to edit the film and I want to show it to audiences.

So, for example, at the edge of a volcano, yes, there were certain dangers and there was an eruption and glowing slabs or blobs of lava came down on us, raining down and some of them very large. I mean, the size of a…

the size of a car, the size even of a truck. So you better flee quickly. You get out of it. But I'm not searching the dangers. The nature of my storytelling sometimes requires to go into extreme situations, yes. I think...

To look deep into our human nature, to look deep into the darkest recesses of our soul or the hidden things deep in our soul, you have to put human beings at some sort of an edge.

You grew up in extreme circumstances during World War II in Munich and then in a remote part of Bavaria in the mountains where you were poor. And there was one time where your mother, when you were living in Bavaria during the war, took you and your brother up a slope to get a better view of Rosenheim, a city in Bavaria that had been bombed.

and was on fire, and you describe it as a vast inferno tracing the terrible pulse of the end of the world on the night sky. I knew that outside of our tight valley, there was a whole world that was dangerous and spectral. Not that I was afraid of it. I was curious to know it. A lot of people would have been afraid of it. Why were you more curious to know it?

Well, I was too young. You see, number one, when my mother fled Munich, I was only two weeks old, 14 days old, when there was carpet bombing on Munich. Of course, there's no memory, anything. The childhood was very, very closed and very beautiful. But when I was two and a half, and it's my very first memory, my mother wakes us up abruptly in the middle of the night. It must have been April 1st.

1945. And she says, you have to see it, boys, wraps us in blankets, rushes up on a slope. And at the end of the valley, the entire sky was red and orange, but not flickering because it, Rosenheim is 40 miles away. So the entire sky is pulsing slowly, red and orange. And

And that somehow is embedded in my memory forever. And of course, I knew all of a sudden there's something out there. There's a world out there. There's war out there. There's a conflagration out there. And I became curious about.

And it's strange because my two brothers who grew up with me did not move out and were that curious. They were very successful in their professions, but not like me. I was one who would move to Antarctica or to the jungle or to the Sahara Desert to do my work.

So when you were young, you got into a fight with your older brother and you stabbed him in the wrist and the thigh. There was blood all over. And you're right that you realized you urgently needed some self-discipline. What did you do to acquire that self-discipline? It was from one moment to the next. I knew that something like that cannot happen again.

And that's how a character is being formed, defeats, catastrophes that I created. And of course, that shaped my character. And from one moment to the next, I knew you have to control what is wild in you. You have to be disciplined. And until today, 90% of what you see when you meet me is discipline.

People think, yeah, I'm the wild guy out there. And so, no, I'm a disciplined professional. And at that time, family, of course, was important because we grew up with our mother who raised us. We were three brothers and one mother. We lived in one single room in a sort of pension, we called it. It's a boarding house room.

And, of course, we had clashes like brothers would have. And until today, it's mysterious to foreigners. Not long ago, a few years ago, I visited my older brother in Spain where he had built himself a big house and had a wonderful sailing boat there.

And we were at a fish restaurant and I studied the menu and he put his arm around my shoulder. And all of a sudden I feel some stinging thing in my back and I smell smoke.

And I realize he has set my shirt on fire with his cigarette lighter. And we laughed so hard and everybody around on the table was appalled. But sometimes that's how brothers sometimes function and I love him dearly and

And we do mischievous things to each other. It does happen. And it's not that serious. You see, somebody gave me his T-shirt and we cooled my back with a few glasses of Prosecco.

And that was that. That strikes me as slightly less than hilarious and kind of dangerous. No, it was hilarious. Come on, a shirt doesn't really burn. I mean, it glows and glimmers a little bit. But that was his joke.

You talk about wanting to see the dark recesses of the soul, but you also write when it comes to your soul that you'd rather die than go to an analyst because it's your view that something fundamentally wrong happens there. And you say it's a mistake to light up your soul, shadows and darkness and all. Why do you not want to light up your own soul but want to explore the dark recesses of other people's souls? Well, that's my profession.

That's my profession as a poet. And you look deep into who we are and you describe it.

But you shouldn't make the mistake to believe that memoirs are confessional. I'm not into that business and I never liked too deep introspection. There's enough in my memoirs. There's enough introspection. There's no doubt it's in there, but to a certain limit. And I do not want to step beyond a certain threshold of

It is not healthy if you circle too much around your own navel. And it is not good to recall all the trauma of your childhood. It's good to forget them. It's good to bury them. Not in all cases, but in most cases. So psychoanalysis is

I do not deny that it is good and necessary in a very few cases. Yes, I admit it, but it's not my thing. And I keep telling men. So, you see, rather dead than going to a psychiatrist, but at the same time, rather dead than ever wearing a toupee. Yeah.

You see, my hair is thinning and I just accept it as it is. So nothing, rather dead. It's nice to know you have your values straight. And women would immediately agree with me. You cannot live with a man who starts to wear a toupee and thinks he is handsome now.

And rejuvenated. Are you afraid of what you'd see if you shone a light on your soul? No, no. I know who I am and I know where I come from. And I know where I'm heading to. No fear and no regrets. Sure, I made massive mistakes. And I'm, in a way, a result of my own defeats.

So be it. They formed me. They made me thinking beyond what I normally thought before.

One of the films that made you famous is Aguerre, The Wrath of God. And this is a film about a conquistador leading a Spanish expedition in South America, searching for El Dorado, the city of gold. And he goes mad along the way. He calls himself the wrath of God. What interests you about a mind that makes you want to write about it or, you know? Yeah.

Well, there are somehow touching a chord that's in us, something mad or borderline mad, something of power and dementia and madness, right?

And through such figures, all of a sudden we have it spelled out. We can feel it. We can touch it. We can read it and sense it and start to compare it. Where I am standing, how mad am I myself? Do you feel like you are mad? No, no. I'm the only one in the entire profession who is clinically sane. Explain that.

Oh, come on. I wouldn't have made some 80 films without having my wits together and my sanity and my professionalism. I'm the only one. When you look at the craze of Hollywood and all these...

red carpet events and the statements at the red carpet, which are all performative. It's all performative, borderline insanity in a way, or saccharine, pink sort of vanilla ice cream emotions. I'm the only one who is sane. The only one.

All right. I'm definitely taking your word for it. Please make sure. And you can read it. Every single line in my memoir shows you that I'm absolutely sane in an ocean of craze.

Aguirre is about a Spanish conquistador who goes mad, and you can argue that Fitzcarraldo is a little mad too. And the actor who you got to play both of them is Klaus Kinski, who you describe as a madman. And you knew him since you were 13 and he was 36, and you were living in the same boarding house, and you knew he'd go into rages. You'd witnessed his rages.

Did it seem like a good idea to you to have somebody who seemed mad play Mad Men?

Or was it just your confidence in him as an actor? We have to be careful. I said it, yes, he was mad or in moments of paranoia, but he had splendid moments of friendship and warmth and insight. So he had quite a few facets. And of course, since I lived in the same boarding house with him, directly with him, and saw the tornado laying waste to...

to the entire apartment. So I knew what was coming at me when some nine or ten years later I invited him to play the leading part in Aguirre, The Wrath of God. I knew it was going to be difficult, but I said to myself, what the real task now is, since he's such an incredible actor, since he has such a presence online,

and dynamic and authority on the screen, I have to domesticate the wild beast somehow. All his crazy attitudes should not explode outside of the screen during a dinner or after dinner where he opens fire at a hut full of extras. It shouldn't happen. It should be all somehow organized for the screen itself.

And I think that that was my achievement. Outside of him actually firing into the tent, into the hut, which happened. So I guess you were partially successful with that?

No, not partially successful. I was successful because I made five films with him. And they all, when you look at them and forget about Kinski and forget about his private crazed personality and his egomania, forget about all this. There are five films out there that have something that you normally do not see in a movie.

presence and an intensity of a leading character that's unprecedented. I have only a few precedents are there, like the young Marlon Brando, for example.

And no matter how difficult it was to tame him, to domesticate the beast, it doesn't matter. The only thing, the only, only thing that counts, what do you see on the screen? Well, you can't argue that his presence isn't remarkable on screen. I mean, you can't take your eyes off of him. But there is that thing that one person had part of his finger shot off.

when Kinski fired into the bamboo hut. So, I mean, that matters too. I mean, I understand that what really matters to you as a filmmaker is what you see on screen, but there was some collateral damage. Yes, but that was the most serious thing that ever happened. And of course it is serious and you have to cope with it and

And I threatened Kinski. I was actually, there are wild rumors about it that I had a gun in my hands. And so that's not true. But I threatened him and he understood this was not a joke anymore. And he had to be disciplined from now on. And through all the other films I made with him, never anything of this magnitude ever happened.

Filmmaker Werner Herzog talking to Terry Gross last year. His memoir, Every Man for Himself and God Against All, is now out in paperback. We'll be right back after a short break. I'm Tanya Mosley, and this is Fresh Air. This message comes from Carvana.

Whether you need weeks to research the perfect car or know exactly what you want, Carvana makes car buying easy. Choose from Carvana's massive inventory using customizable search tools. However you buy, buy your car with Carvana.

This message comes from NPR sponsor, Sattva. Founder and CEO, Ron Rutzen, shares the experience they hope to create in their viewing rooms. We want our customers to feel like they've walked into a luxury hotel. That's what Sattva has been inspired by from the day that we started. We take sleep very seriously. We believe it unlocks a superpower if you get the right sleep on the right mattress. We believe we can provide that. To

To learn more, go to s-double-a-t-v-a-dot-com-slash-n-p-r. This is Eric Glass. On This American Life, we specialize in compelling stories from everyday life. I was like, wow, you literally just died and came back. And the first thing you ask is, do you need any money? Your life stories, really good ones, in your podcast feed, This American Life. ♪

Hi, it's Mariel Segarra from LifeKid. There's a first time for everything, including giving to NPR. Whether you're a brand new listener or a longtime fan, please join the community of NPR network supporters today. Make your gift at donate.npr.org. And thank you. You grew up, well, your very early years were during World War II, and then you grew up in the aftermath of

Your father was a Nazi and he fought in the war, but he was mostly like in the supply room, I think. Yeah. And your mother was briefly a National Socialist. Did they talk with you ever about Nazism? We didn't talk that much. My mother, it was obvious she was very early on embarrassed about being having been misguided and so.

And she practically, of course, she had to raise all alone three children. There was no money. My father never paid anything to support us. And she became a completely different person. And of course, it was always lingering out there. And of course...

I was fascinated by what happened to Germany. How is it possible that within a few years such a cultured nation lapses into, transforms into a world of barbarism? Well, even your father, your father was from an academic family. I mean, he was from a very educated family. He was an academic himself. So you must have wondered the same about your father. How could somebody who was educated from a very educated family...

Yes, and it happened to many other educated families. There was no one spared. I mean, Germany was almost 100% Nazi. The dissidents, yes, they were out there, but they ended up in concentration camps very quickly. You know, your mother took you to Bavaria in the mountains to escape the bombing. But in retrospect, she also escaped the Nazis. She escaped her own country. I mean, her own people. Right.

In a way, yes. But of course, in this village, there were also Nazis. Oh, sure. I hadn't thought of that. Did you know that? Yes, there were also Nazis. Well, much later, it took some time. I thought, I didn't even know what Germany was. It was the valley where we grew up in this remote place and the waterfall in the gorge behind the house. That was our world. And

And of course, the daily struggle. We had no running water. You had to go to the well with a bucket. We didn't have any running water in the house. So my shower was the ice-cold water of the waterfall deep in the gorge.

and hardly any electricity. I didn't know of the existence of cinema until I was 11. I think the first time I noticed that there was something like Germany, I must have been seven or eight years old. For me, the world was around me and that was it.

And of course, I started to question and I started to understand how does chaos and barbarism invade a fairly organized country. And that's why I wanted to go to the chaos of Eastern Congo after its independence, which I never reached and I probably wouldn't have survived it.

Your parents had to undergo denazification after the war. Yes. Did they ever tell you what that entailed? My mother and my father was always outside of my life. I hardly knew him. Your father you hardly knew. Did your mother tell you?

Yes, but not very much. It was fairly laconic and she said, "Look at me, that's me now." And I did a very, very severe mistake in my life and my character had to readjust. I'm a different person, I think differently now. And so I accepted it.

And, for example, she was never a racist, never deep into Nazi ideology at all. How do you think growing up during the war affected you, even though you were at a remove from it in the mountains? In the war and its aftermath? It is more the aftermath and the restrictions. For example, I noticed...

that we were hungry. That was the only thing that was really hard to take. Otherwise, that we lived in very deep poverty. I didn't notice. It was a normal thing. And everyone around us was impoverished. And so it was nothing really special. Only much later, I understood what poverty meant. But that I had gone through it never affected me.

Although you say that, I'm wondering if you're thinking at all about the children in Israel and in Gaza. Like children in Israel were kidnapped. There's been missile attacks. Children in Gaza have getting bombed. Many children have been killed.

I'm wondering if you're thinking about that a lot now. Yes. You have somebody talking to you who grew up in a war. We were bombed out. There was a foot of glass shard and bricks and debris on my cradle when I was 14 days old. And then, of course, I grew up in post-war time.

starvation, poverty. And since I had this experience, for me it's obvious that there shouldn't be any war. I'm against any war at all. And of course it is terrible what we are witnessing now. It is terrible. It is terrible and it shouldn't be. But what can I do? I cannot fight anymore.

as a volunteer in this war. Would you if you could? It sounds like you're against war and wouldn't want to participate in one. You know, why I would participate if in Germany all of a sudden neo-Nazis started a rebellion, an armed rebellion, a coup d'etat. You would know who would be first one to rush back and pick up a weapon. It would be me. I would fight. Because?

Because something like times of the barbarism of the Nazis must not repeat itself. You see, as long as there is breath in me, I would fight. I understand that. And of course, having caused, having created the Holocaust, Germany has specific attention to Israel now.

There's no doubt. But we also now, since it will be terrible what's coming, we also have to look after all the casualties on both sides. We need to take another short break here. So let me reintroduce you. If you're just joining us, my guest is writer and filmmaker Werner Herzog. His new memoir is called Every Man for Himself and God Against All. We'll be right back. This is Fresh Air.

Hi, I'm Laurel Wamsley, and I cover personal finance for NPR. That means I report on some of the questions that might keep you or your loved ones up at night. Like, will I ever be able to buy a home? What about retirement? As interest rates drop, where should I put my money? Economic headlines can be confusing, but NPR is here to help you make sense of them. To support this coverage, please give today at donate.npr.org.

From the online trends that dominated 2024. On the spectrum of rat to demure. Where are you right now? To spicy TikTok viral reads. These romance fantasy books about dragons. NPR kept you up to speed on pop culture all year long. Give back to the news source that just hits different by donating today at donate.npr.org. And thank you.

If you're the kind of person whose idea of a good party conversation starts with, I heard it on NPR, it might be time to take your super fandom seriously. Deck yourself out in sale NPR swag, from t-shirts to ball caps to the almighty NPR tote, all at 25% off through November 27th at shop.npr.org.

The first time you narrated a film was when you made a film for a production company in Germany that specialized in extreme subjects.

and you did a film for them about ski jumping, which you knew a lot about having grown up in the mountains in Bavaria. And you used to like build, God, what are they called? Like platforms to jump off, to ski off of? - Yeah, ramps. - Ramps, yes. And got terribly injured during one of those. And a friend of yours got terribly injured on one of his jumps. But anyway, so you made a documentary about that and they told you, you have to narrate it 'cause that's what everybody does. They narrate their own films.

And you've become famous for your narrations in films, in your documentaries. And you've had some movie roles, including in Jack Reacher, in The Mandalorian, which is like a Star Wars spinoff, parodying yourself on The Simpsons. And they're all like sinister roles. What do you think it is about your voice that gets you cast in sinister roles?

Maybe it's the content of what you're saying. Yes, the content, of course. And since then, I narrated my own writings, my own commentaries, and I had found my voice.

But it's a stylized voice. When I'm talking to you, I'm talking like me in commentaries. There's a certain stylization, a certain performance in it, a certain hypnotic voice in it. I can't describe it easily and it has caught on. Audiences love it.

So I do it for them as well. I do films for audiences. I write my book for readers. So I'm enjoying it and I have been good.

in parts, in roles where I have to play the badass bad guy like in Jack Reacher or where, for example, in a film by Harmony Corrine, which is called Julian Donkey Boy, I play a hostile father who harasses his dysfunctional family and I'm good at that.

But it's all performance. Don't believe, don't ever believe. I'm like that as a private person. That's good to know. Can you quote any of the lines? No, not really. But you know, when Jack Reacher was released, it was released in France as well. My wife immediately gets frantic calls from her girlfriend in Paris. And she says, Lena, are you really married to that man? Yeah.

We can give you shelter if you need to flee. We are only an overnight flight away. And Lena laughed so hard and told me about it. And of course, she will testify that I'm a mild-mannered, fluffy husband. She came up with that. And I live with her happily now since 28 years. She will give you the right testimony. Good. Yeah.

So we're about at the end of the interview, and I have to say you made it through without being shot at because you were shot at at the BBC, or at least you were shot and only mildly wounded. What was that about? Do you have any idea how it happened? No, we do not know because I just heard somebody across the street on a veranda ranting like road rage. It all of a sudden I heard some sort of a mild explosion and

and something like a glowing piece of metal, like a kilo weight of glowing metal hits me at my belt or near my belt. And I thought something at the camera had exploded, but no, and I saw the man with the rifle ducking down and disappearing. And I did not know because I...

I did not want to call police. I said to the crew, BBC people, you are frantically now dialing 911. Consider it. We'll spend the next six hours filing reports at a police station and we will have a helicopter over us and a SWAT team arriving in five minutes flat.

Do we need that? Do you want that? And so we decided we'd just continue shooting, but at a safer place. Were you outside when that happened?

Yes, it was outside and you can still see it on YouTube. It's funny because people think, ah, yeah, it was all staged and made up. No, it was not. It was reality. It was the real world. And of course, in a world of fake news and inventions and embellishments, and so people believe that being shot and hit, not seriously, but seriously,

Anyway, that it must have been made up. Or having moved the ship over a mountain, that must have been a digital effect and we are only pretending. No, I moved the ship. So you have to...

Connect yourself to the real world and then all of a sudden my memoirs become the most natural thing. A man who lived a very normal life with a few things that were exceptional. And I think it's not exceptional to move a ship over a mountain. Every grown-up man should do something like that. Did you go to the emergency room after you were shot?

No, because we could see I was bleeding, but I could see it was the bullet went through all my leather jacket and the folded up catalogue and all my shirt and T-shirt. But it did not perforate my abdominal. It did not perforate and go into my abdomen. If it had been inside of me, lodged in my intestines, in that case I would have gone to the hospital.

emergency room. But I can distinguish what is serious and what can be taken and tolerated. So I do my best and I think in this case I did my best as well.

I should hope you would have gone to the emergency room if it penetrated your intestines. Well, I would have gone, sure, yes. Okay. So what's next for you? Well, I just finished another book, The Future of Truth, which will be released next spring, but in its German original format.

What you have in front of you is a very fine translation of my memoirs, but it always takes until it's being translated. So it will take about a year and I made also two films that are not fully released yet. And I'm working on some poetry and I'm working on a translation of poetry by a Canadian writer on Dathier. And...

Well, I'm just plowing on wildly. Do you ever stop working? Yes, I have long hours of sleep. I'm fairly lazy. My days of shooting are brief. My hours of writing are brief. I do my tax returns three hours in the morning. Then I write three hours memoirs and I go to the pharmacy or whatever.

But I write 15 pages. It goes fast. And next day, another 10, 15 pages. Because it's my life. I have lived it. And it's in me. You see, it's not foreign. It's in me. And because of that, I can describe it for you. And you will not be disappointed. Thank you so much for coming back to our show. I really appreciate it. And I really enjoyed our conversation. Oh, so did I. I enjoyed it. Thank you.

Werner Herzog speaking with Terry Gross last year. His memoir is called Every Man for Himself and God Against All. Coming up, Justin Chang reviews the new film Queer, set in Mexico in the 1950s, starring Daniel Craig as an expat infatuated with a younger man. This is Fresh Air.

Ho, ho, ho! Santa here, coming to you from the North Pole, where the elves in our podcast division have just completed work on this season's best gift for public radio lovers, NPR+. Give the gift of sponsored free listening and even bonus episodes from your favorite NPR podcasts, all while supporting public media. Learn more at plus.npr.org. Ho, ho, ho, ho!

Lately on the NPR Politics Podcast, we're talking about a big question. How much can one guy change? They want change. What will change look like? Or energy? Drill, baby, drill. Schools. Take the Department of Education closer. Health care. Better and less expensive. Follow coverage of a changing country. Promises made, promises kept. We're going to keep our promises. On the NPR Politics Podcast.

Every weekday, NPR's best political reporters come to you on the NPR Politics Podcast to explain the big news coming out of Washington, the campaign trail and beyond. We don't just want to tell you what happened. We tell you why it matters. Join the NPR Politics Podcast every single afternoon to understand the world through political eyes.

The Italian director Luca Guadagnino scored a critical and commercial hit earlier this year with a tennis-themed romantic triangle, Challengers. Now he's back with Queer, an adaptation of William S. Burroughs' autobiographical novel. It stars Daniel Craig as an American living in 1950s Mexico City who falls hard for a younger man. Queer is now playing in theaters, and our film critic Justin Chang has this review.

Nobody does forbidden longing in far-off places quite like Luca Guadagnino. He whisked us off to Italy for the passionate affairs of I Am Love and Call Me By Your Name, gave us love and death on a Sicilian island in a bigger splash, and took us all across America in the cannibal romance Bones and All. Now he's made Queer, a moody account of thwarted longing that begins in an expat-heavy corner of Mexico City during the early 1950s.

A world that Guadagnino brings to life in all its sweaty, scuzzy glory. The story follows an American drifter named William Lee, played by Daniel Craig, with a louche smile and nary a hint of 007 elegance. Addicted to booze and heroin, Lee spends his days hopping from bar to bar, hoping to lock eyes and more with the handsome young men he spots there and around town. And few are more handsome than Eugene Allerton.

a freshly discharged U.S. Navy serviceman played by a terrific Drew Starkey. Allerton is trim, slender, and aloof to the point of disdainful, which makes Lee lust for him all the more. In time, after a few meals and many drinks, the two fall into bed in a scene that Guadagnino films with both roughness and tenderness. But once isn't enough for Lee.

and he spends every minute trying to keep this enigmatic young beauty from slipping away. At one point, a drunken Lee approaches Allerton at a party and causes a bit of a scene, prompting a friend, Tom, to intervene. I want to talk to you. Without speaking.

I don't want to touch you. Like, like, like, like the Russians. Yeah. Like the Mayans. All right, Bill. Let's take it easy, huh? Hey, Tom. You got a drink, Tom? Yeah. A cup of water, maybe? Yeah.

Lee is a fictionalized stand-in for the beat writer William S. Burroughs, whose years spent living in Mexico were eventful, to say the least. He began writing queer in 1952, while awaiting trial for the killing of his wife, Joan Vollmer, during a drunken game of William Tell. Burroughs never finished the book, which was finally published in its incomplete form in 1985. By that point, he had become a countercultural icon.

known for his boldly experimental works like naked lunch his struggles with addiction and his many sexual relationships with men and women guadagnino has said in interviews that he read queer at a young age and has wanted to film it for years

That may surprise some of the director's fans, since his swoony romanticism, on display in the recent Challengers, isn't an obvious fit with the biting rawness of Burroughs' prose. At the same time, Guadagnino clearly likes to push against expectations, and his horror movies, like Suspiria, have shown a flair for the surreal and grotesque. Even when Queer's narrative loses momentum...

it's fascinating to see a filmmaker known for his lush beautiful surfaces try to connect with a writer's famously uncompromising ugliness for the first hour or so the screenplay by justin kuritskes is largely faithful to its source

But things take a weird turn once Lee talks Allerton into a trip to South America, so they can find a psychedelic called Yahe, or Ayahuasca, which can apparently confer telepathic powers. Deep in the jungles of Ecuador, Guadagnino essentially tries to imagine the mind-blowing ending that Burroughs never wrote.

The director is clearly having fun, filling the screen with hallucinatory imagery, and introducing a gun-toting healer, played by an unrecognizable Leslie Manville. In one maddening and mesmerizing sequence, a drugged-out Lee and Allerton dance silently in the nude, their bodies twisting and melting together as though under a kaleidoscope.

Guadagnino is working overtime to honor Burroughs. In the thoroughly bonkers epilogue, set back in Mexico, he goes well beyond the parameters of the novel to weave in moments from the writer's tumultuous life. But the reason queer works as well as it does has everything to do with Craig's performance.

It's worth remembering that long before he became James Bond, or a gay detective in the Knives Out movies, Craig played the tempestuous younger lover of the painter Francis Bacon in the 1998 drama Love is the Devil. He flips that equation brilliantly in Queer, with robust physicality and delicate emotion.

He shows us a man in wretched yet defiant thrall to his wants, for sex, for love, for a moment of out-of-body transcendence. It's a singular performance, but also, in its expression of pure desire, a deeply human one. Justin Chang is a film critic for The New Yorker. He reviewed the new movie Queer, starring Daniel Craig.

On Monday's show, John Petiste, former band leader of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, joins us at the piano to play his reimaginings of Beethoven's music. His new album is Beethoven Blues. He'll also talk about the extremes in his life in 2022 when he won multiple Grammys and his wife had a reoccurrence of leukemia and a bone marrow transplant.

I hope you can join us. To keep up with what's on the show and get highlights of our interviews, follow us on Instagram at NPR Fresh Air. Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller. Our senior producer today is Roberta Shorrock.

Audrey Bentham is our technical director and engineer, with additional engineering support from Joyce Lieberman, Julian Hertzfeld, and Diana Martinez. Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Anne-Marie Baldonado, Sam Brigger, Lauren Krenzel, Teresa Madden, Monique Nazareth, Bea Chaloner, Susan Nyakundi, and Anna Bauman. Our digital media producers are Molly C.V. Nesper and Sabrina Siewert. With Terry Gross, I'm Tanya Mosley.

This message comes from Anthropic. Meet Claude, Anthropic's AI assistant that elevates your entire organization. Securely connect your company knowledge and empower every employee with expert-level support. Learn more at anthropic.com slash enterprise.

This message comes from NPR sponsor, Rosetta Stone, an expert in language learning for 30 years. Right now, NPR listeners can get Rosetta Stone's lifetime membership to 25 different languages for 50% off. Learn more at rosettastone.com slash NPR.

It's cuffing season, the cold months where we might look for a warm somebody to cuddle up to. But dating isn't always warm and fuzzy. And this year, there were so many big debates about how we love. On It's Been a Minute, our cuffing season series will help you answer some big questions like, what is the ick really about? Or is it okay to date for money? To find out, listen now to the It's Been a Minute podcast from NPR.