Monday, May 30, 2011

Movie Times

Movie Times

Despite the death of Welles and Heston document consultation cinematic story in one way or another. We have almonds saturated molasses of Morgan Freeman, still the voice of Jehovah’s own unequivocation and f. Murray Abraham disemboweling jungle animals-something funny in nature documentaries.

But there is nothing that says fear as Director Werner Herzog describe what we see now. In his film 3D Cave of forgotten dreams, pressure: showing of later, emotional influence of aspect (you can imagine what they’re saying and I am only just escapes to tell “”), the words of the last man on earth can be.

Herzog enters the cave of dreams forgotten underground Chauvet-Pont d’Arc, in the region of ardechenses of France. This collection contains the oldest known prehistoric art, 30,000 years, closed since the world for most of that time. The caves were discovered in 1994, and since then only a few visitors have gotten into a restricted path.

Through the restrictions of the Government challenges some creative serious Herzog; officials are limited time and access in the hope that the protection of these cave paintings of the kind of degradation that occurred in Altamira.

Herzog could not use nothing but cold electronic lights and small cameras. It was shot in 3-d of the contours of the surfaces where the drawings are sealed by millennia of glass tanks. They are images of animals, most of them extinct, made in the course of 5000 years, before a landslide caught them.

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