The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser
International Arthouse
•
1h 49m
Directed by Werner Herzog | 110 mins | 1974
After spotting self-taught outsider artist Bruno S. in a documentary about street musicians, Herzog was determined to work with him, and proceeded to cast this troubled man with zero acting experience who’d been raised in mental institutions as the lead in two of his films. In the first of them, he appears as the mysterious Kaspar Hauser, a young man who, after a life of unexplained confinement, is set free into early 19th-century civilization with a vocabulary of only a few words and a letter in hand. Hauser becomes something of a local freakshow before a professor, Georg Friedrich Daumer (Walter Ladengast), takes him under his wing to attempt to socialize him. Closely based on the details of the story of the real-life foundling Hauser, who died in 1833, Herzog’s film is an affecting, distinctive drama, and Bruno S., 41 playing at least half that, is a revelation of wide-eyed, wounded innocence.
Up Next in International Arthouse
-
The German Chainsaw Massacre
Directed by Christoph Schlingensief | 63 mins | 1990
Called “one of the greatest artists who ever lived” by Austrian novelist and playwright Elfriede Jelinek, Schlingensief—who died in 2010 at age 49—was a multihyphenate whirling dervish of chaotic creative energy and relentless provocation, the ... -
The Headless Woman
Leaving March 1
Directed by Lucrecia Martel | 89 mins | 2008
Martel’s haunting study of self-deception follows Veronica, a beloved but remote mother, after her car hits something in the road—or was it a person? As the stylish “Vero” (the late, great Maria Onetto) drifts in a daze among family an... -
The Hole
Directed by Tsai Ming-liang | 89 mins | 1999
It’s the close of the millennium and Taipei has emptied out with the onset of a mysterious virus, but Lee Kang-sheng and Yang Kuei-mei lag behind among the ruins, where maybe a last chance at communication lies through a breach between their apartments...