Scenarios III: Stroszek; Nosferatu, Phantom of the Night; Where the Green Ants Dream; Cobra Verde
ISBN: 9781452961415
Platform/Publisher: JSTOR / University of Minnesota Press
Digital rights: Users: unlimited; Printing: chapter; Download: chapter
Subjects: Motion picture plays German -- Translations into English;

This third collection of German film director Herzog's scripts represents a worthy addition to the series, and a further glimpse into the mind and work of an eccentric genius. The "scenarios"--Stroszek (1977), Nosferatu, Phantom of the Night (1979), Where the Green Ants Dream (1984), and Cobra Verde (1987)--don't resemble traditional screenplays. Instead they take the form of hybrid texts that combine elements of novels, prose poetry, and limited bits of the standard screenplay format. And form follows function, because, as this book makes clear, Herzog's films are decidedly nontraditional, following outsiders and radicals rather than traditionally relatable protagonists. Herzog's writing evinces his ability to capture multiple facets of his bizarre, often grotesque characters, and to find humanity in them even at their most despicable. He can take the slave-trading antihero of Cobra Verde from megalomania to despair within several scenes, and convey the sorrow and the horror of Nosferatu's Count Dracula on the very same page. Herzog also offers splendidly evocative descriptions, as in Nosferatu's scene description of a coast upon which "wreck lies next to wreck, as if all the ships have sunk, one after the other." Herzog is already known as an extraordinary filmmaker, and this book furnishes proof that he is an equally extraordinary writer. (Nov.)


Werner Herzog has produced, written, and directed more than seventy films, including Nosferatu the Vampyre ; Aguirre, the Wrath of God ; Fitzcarraldo ; and Grizzly Man . He grew up in a remote mountain village in Bavaria and now lives in Los Angeles, California. His books Of Walking in Ice and Scenarios I and II are also published by Minnesota.



Krishna Winston is Marcus L. Taft Professor of German Language and Literature at Wesleyan University.



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