Werner Herzog's Death Row Portraits

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“When I talk to you, it does not necessarily mean that I have to like you. But I respect you and you are a human being, and I think human beings should not be executed.” — Werner Herzog

Director: Werner Herzog
Year: 2012
Country: Austria, UK, USA
Running time: 208 mins
Genres: Crime, Justice, Law

Death Row – Portrait of James Barnes
With: James Barnes, Tod Goodyear, Jeannice Barnes
Festivals: Berlin 2012
52 minutes

Death Row – Portrait of Linda Carty
With: Linda Carty, Chris Robinson, Connie Spence, Jovelle Joubert, Michael Goldberg
Festivals: Berlin 2012
52 minutes

Death Row – Portrait of Joseph Garcia and George Rivas
With: Joseph Garcia, George Rivas, Norvell Graham, Joey Contreras
Festivals: Berlin 2012
52 minutes

Death Row – Portrait of Hank Skinner
With: Hank Skinner, David Bowser
Festivals: Berlin 2012
52 minutes

The abyss that commands Werner Herzog’s attention in this year’s programme is a particularly American one, located where crime awaits punishment on death row. The generous assistance of the Goethe-Institut enables us to showcase the great German documentarian’s most recent feature (Into the Abyss) as well as Death Row, the powerful TV series he made alongside it.

Conceived alongside the feature Into the Abyss, the Death Row series consists of four riveting hour-long documentaries, each an exemplary, in-depth true crime report in itself. Each is shaped around an interview with a convicted killer (or two) awaiting his or her appointment with a lethal injection. Herzog’s line of enquiry is forthright: how do people, and the state, go about killing other people? What were they thinking then? What are they thinking now? What is even true about the stories they tell? Others connected with the cases – victims, police, lawyers, relatives – are drawn into Herzog’s enquiry.

A Texan DA makes an emotional plea on behalf of the victims in a case before she warns Herzog about humanising the perpetrator in his film. “I do not attempt to humanize her,” he replies. “She is simply a human being, period.” Human beings in extremis have no more unflinching documentary explorer than Werner Herzog. The sober simplicity of his approach in these films is most effective.

“Werner Herzog has become the indispensable Virgil of 21st-century film space, the best and most indefatigable guide through wonders and horrors that should astound us and rarely otherwise do… In his latest, Death Row, he succeeds in making the TV-doc dynamic feel fresh, meaningful, and appalling…

The four cases are four different brands of down-home nightmare, including one centered on devious psychopath James ‘The Burning Bed’ Barnes and another involving a thrilling Texas prison break that could easily be its own movie. The simple approach is… cinema as people telling stories, revealing far more than they mean to. (Crime photos are useful, too.) But Herzog’s inquisitiveness is its own brand, now as always, and though America has been just one detour among many for him, it’s a terrain that comes off more apocalyptically bleak in his gimlet eyes here than in any film since the first Paradise Lost doc.” — Michael Atkinson, Village Voice

PROUDLY SUPPORTED BY GOETHE-INSTITUT 

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