Where the Green Ants Dream
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Average customer review:Product Description
Hailed as a Masterpiece of Modern Cinema.In the wilds of Australia aboriginal tribes observe their ancient legends and laws evolved over 40000 years. Their culture is threatened by a giant corporation that wants to mine in one of their aborigines' holiest sites - the place 'where the green ants dream'. As long as those dreams remain uninterrupted the aboriginal culture will survive but if the mining company executives succeed with their plan to destroy the holy ground the aborigines believe that their civilization - and the earth will perish. Thus starts a revolt by the world of dreams against an impatient civilization that seems to want everything but understands nothing.System Requirements:Running Time 105 Mins.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: DOCUMENTARIES/MISC. Rating: R UPC: 844628010450 Manufacturer No: TE1045
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #43769 in DVD
- Brand: Tango Entertainment, Inc
- Released on: 2006-04-25
- Rating: R (Restricted)
- Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
- Formats: Box set, Collector's Edition, Color, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC
- Original language: English
- Number of discs: 1
- Dimensions: 1.00 pounds
- Running time: 105 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Director Werner Herzog is famous for the deranged physical feats he captures in his movies, but Where the Green Ants Dream tackles an even greater challenge: The gap between the Western mind and Australian aboriginal cosmology. In the Australian outback, a geologist for a mining company (Bruce Spence, The Road Warrior, Aquamarine) finds his work obstructed by aborigines who tell him that his explosive tests will disrupt the dreaming of the green ants and wreak havoc on humanity. The mining company tries to mollify the aborigines, but they implacably resist. The confrontation escalates to a lawsuit argued before the Australian supreme court (which is based on the first legal battle over aboriginal land rights). This may sound dry--and much of the film is bathed in gusts of red Australian dust--but throughout the film, the geologist struggles to communicate with the aborigines and grasp the fundamentally different perception of the world. His glimpse (and ours) of this other worldview turns Western civilization on its side and leads the geologist to question his whole life. Herzog (Aguirre: The Wrath of God, Grizzly Man) isn't subtle, but that doesn't diminish the often hypnotic power of his images, from footage of tornados to the faces of the aborigines, gentle as water yet as firm as stones. This is a worthy addition to Herzog's difficult, thrilling, maddening, and ultimately rewarding body of work. --Bret Fetzer
The New York Times
"...full of moments of inspired craziness and wisdom the movie works its spell through the curious, strikingly beautiful images"
Customer Reviews
Well Meaning, but...
I have a great deal of respect for Werner Herzog and have been moved by many of his films, but unfortunately this isn't one of them.
Stunning visuals. The Australian Bush is an amazing sight. An Aboriginal face has something about it that makes you think you're looking back through all 40,000 years of their history, into something wise and mystical.
"Are you enjoying the movie?" I was asked after 30 minutes.
"I'm still waiting for it to start."
I'm sorry, but there is a sole conflict throughout. A timely conflict, a timely topic, a very important and worthwhile cause for consideration. But alas, the characters are as flat as the landscape, and the resolution of the plot is one you can predict before you finish reading the cover blurb.
FATA MORGANA!
Werner Herzog is the perfect and unique embodiment of the always worried, irreverent, unsatisfied and non conformist director that enjoys to walk on the razor edge and delights to expose limit situations at the eve of reach the boiling point.
That's why his entire cinematography has been signed for newness and original proposals, featured by unexplored territories and unthinkable stages.
In this case, we assist to the clash of two civilizations, visibly differenced , the ancestral aborigines and the western way of life, where the myth and the progress will collide like the unavoidable crash of two trains displacing each one, in opposite senses.
A company will settle in the middle of the Australian desert, in order to explore and exploit uranium reserves. But they will be faced for ancestral tribes who oppose them due they will interrupt the dream of the green ants.
A movie dedicated to Herzog' s mother, with intriguing and sharp reflections all the way through, when this case be discussed in the Supreme Court, through a very interesting trial, where the happy ending will be absent.
The final sequence will invite you to think and reflect.
This movie become more topical as time passes
Modern civilization and primitive tribal groups do not have the same worldview - and it is this discrepancy that is examined in
Werner Herzog's excellent Australian film. A mining company has located a terrific reserve of valuable uranium in the desert of the outback...but the only problem is that the Aboriginal elders are guarding this land as one of their holiest sites..for here the green ants dream.
These green ants - actually green termites, have a special sense
that orients them to the earth's magnetism so they are wonderful
predictors of weather. If their homes are dug up, then the
Aborigines' universe, their sense of time and place, will be
uprooted. So the people attached to the land argue in court
their right to this ancestral holy spot.
Some of the village elders are depicted by wonderfully wise
Bushmen. That alone makes this a fabulous film. The director treats his themss with dignity and quiet power. See it.




