Like Addle dolf cock up.U Sauwer Krauts October fattening did they hv that in the many showers req;Camps c'mon u ratzz.we will hv a lil Schnetziel.and listen to sm Kraftverk..nothing much !"!WAIT A MIN..😮 3:45
@@dun0790 Just watch some documentaries about people on death row. Most of them are psychopaths like kinski. They are just indifferent about death. That is why psychopaths are so damn effective in everything they do. They have nerves of steel. Death is nothing, its just minor inconvenience to them.
Looking at the way he's eating so uneasily, I think the tension was palpable. I can't imagine his digestion was very good that night. He strikes me as someone who recognizes their own foolish raving, but is too proud to apologize, so either sulks, or doubles down and rants with even more fervor. I am ashamed to say, I recognize that tendency in myself, though I would like to believe I've learned a bit more humility than Kinski. I think even being capable of typing this here may be a level of apology and self-reproach he could not have achieved.
I read an article where someone described Kinski's temper as "Christian Bale's Terminator Salvation rant, but going on for hours and every day." That is terrifying to consider.
Today I learned that Herzog actually planned to murder Kinski. He didn't, but got an offer from an indigenous Chief to have Kinski killed, which Herzog only declined because he still needed Kinski. What a pair.
Someone I know worked the ep. of Parks & Rec Herzog cameo'd in, said he was the nicest guy to talk to, very approachable and was great with both the cast/crew on set. That being said: Herzog would've put Kinski in a shallow grave if he had an opportunity.
Wow! Fitzcarraldo is one of my top movies! I knew there was much tension and hardship in making this movie, but I never knew that the natives offered to kill Kinski for Herzog! WTF!
2:52 - I believe it's a singular phenomenon - an anomaly, truly - in ALL of film history, to have/to watch a scene, wherein the bloodlust was actually, ABSOLUTELY real (and therefore _soooo_ palpable if you realize what's _truly_ going on), furthermore on a primal murderous level, not even really thinly-veiled, for that matter, and fresh on their faces... and furthermore, an entire real, super-offended South American _tribe_ against you (and _behind_ you, with sharp spears jabbing at your head with real-life murderous intent and true contempt) in the scene... and furthermore, the scene in the story ITSELF being the very playing-out of them wanting to murder you, and on the edge of killing you, and you being scared shitless because you _know_ you fucked up, bad (EXACTLY as the real-life situation was, at that moment, for all of them there)... and furthermore them having just offered to disappear you in real life... and furthermore, Herzog deliberately exploiting/capitalizing on all this to capture it all in the scene - it must have been un-fucking-real... I mean, holy SHIT is this scene powerful as _fuuuuuuck_ when it's all put together. _That's_ method acting, MINUS the 'acting,' on an entirely different, entirely more real level than anything even Kinski ever pulled in all his epic rants on set, put together. He came sooo close to being disappeared, it's incredible. The TRUE words of the tribesmen echo what, to me, was actually the most central frustration going on, in all this dude's history: "What scared us was certainly not that madman acting up, so much as it was (nobody/you) doing anything about it." For real, Jesus...
@@atesdosluoglu2191 I'm not really the self censoring type, actually. So I hear you, but the truth is, that term was actually the better descriptor in this particular case... They were gonna make him straight up disappear, right there and then - forever.
They were somehow maybe perfect for each other, kharmically, though, ha... Werner's a bit of a sadist, himself. But Werner you'd actually _want_ to hang out with. 😅😅
@@justinklenk I'm surprised Kinski wasn't confined to a mental hospital or prison for his behaviors which were very clearly antisocial and reckless. He had traits similar to type 2 psychopathy.
@@Romulan2469he was indeed committed to a mental hospital early in his career for strangling someone, and there he was diagnosed with psychopathy. So yeah.
Who knows how authentic this hatred supposed it was, like herzog said, irs funny to listen to it for sure, it seems they respected each other specially from herzog side, kinski was lunatic for sure but he was brilliant as an actor.. and herzog knew that
imagine having a "FRIEND" with DOUBLE-FACE (one Face he is friendly and good to you) and other FACE (he talks about you behind your BACK, about you and not in a nice WAY).....
I think Klaus was mentally ill. My father knew him, he was in German showbiz. I think Klaus knew he had mental problems and inside he must have been a very sad guy. His rage and arrogance , his crazyness was a front. A forced, mental front of talent and rage. Nobody was, is or will be like Klaus Kinski, hate him, love him, despise him, embrace him, he was unique and I am afraid at the end he died alone, he was lucky to have a massive heart attack. Quick and brutal, just like he was. RIP Klaus.
"There he goes. One of God's own prototypes. A high-powered mutant of some kind never even considered for mass production. Too weird to live, and too rare to die." -Hunter .S. Thompson
He's from Munich. His mom was a Burgenland Croat. As much as I would, as a Croat, like to claim him, he has nothing to do with the Balkans. He's a weirdo for different reasons.
Haha some of this is so crazy I can’t help but laugh at it. I love movie set meltdowns. They’re usually pretty ridiculous 😅 I love Werner Herzog, he makes wonderful movies and seems like a seems like a very nice and very interesting man, but haha, I will say that he has really pushed his cast & crew to their breaking point, in the case of Klaus past that point, while shooting his movies. And while that isn’t an excuse for cast or crew members to seek violent retribution by any means, I do think it is a sort of explanation if that makes any sense lol 😅
I saw that Herzog film. It was a period drama with costumes set in the jungle and a story that felt aimless. Like they showed up to set without a script or something. I’m sure we could understand an actor being upset for having to deal with a production of substandard merit.
Are you talking about Fitzcarraldo? That movie is far from aimless. They actually moved that riverboat through the jungle for real, by hand. If it was too slow paced for you then you might like Aguirre, The Wrath of God better. I think it’s the best Herzog/Kinski film.
Are you talking about Fitzcarraldo? That movie is far from aimless. They actually moved that riverboat through the jungle for real, by hand. If it was too slow paced for you then you might like Aguirre, The Wrath of God better. I think it’s the best Herzog/Kinski film.
Dear Uploader: Please elaborate on the meaning of the video notes or thought balloons. I want to accurately describe their content for therapeutic purposes since they likely carry a certain psychological or behavioral value.
Kinski is the greatest. A gift to mankind as an artist. He is monumental, as he had said. Why don't people give what is due, which is monumental respect.
Because even his talent, immense as it was, wasn't enough to balance out the horrifically violent, paedophilic beast he was in his personal life. You would have to delve into serial killers to find people worse than Kinski.
The reason Pola wrote Kindermund was to address the falsities of her father’s “autobiography.” If this is Klaus’s behavior to his friend/director, you can only imagine just how horrific his private, off-screen relationships must have been.
I kinda feel like you missed the point of the video. Kinski was a monster but even monsters stop & play with butterflies once in a while. Still doesn’t change the fact they’re monsters.
Aguirre, the Wrath of God. It’s a good premise but the story went nowhere - but that’s sort of the point of it. It’s one of those German philosophical existential experiments on film.