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Where The Green Ants Dream (1984)
Released By: Media Home Entertainment   Rating: R   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: Media Home Entertainment
Genre: Drama
MPAA Rating: R
Director: Werner Herzog
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Bruce Spence, Wandjuk Marika
Published ID: 2407
UPC: 844628010450,
Plot: In a slightly padded but well-acted and relevant drama, an Australian mining company and a group of aboriginals go to court to settle a dispute over sacred land that the company wants to mine. When the Ayers Mining Company sets out to begin construction of its mine with bulldozers and earth-movers, the Aboriginals physically block the work because the site is exactly where the green ants will gather to dream (a 40,000-year-old legend) and it cannot be disturbed. The company tries the usual means of getting their way -- through bribes and arguments -- but nothing budges the men who came to defend the land. Once in court, it is quickly apparent that tribal laws and customs and beliefs are very different than Western laws -- and how the issue will be resolved is sticky indeed. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Is the word "GEM' overused ?
Added 9/19/2009

This movie is Bruce Spence as wished for. It's Australia on display, it has become one of my favorite Australian films of all time. The aboriginals are really good. I can't say exactly what hits me, because its not a flashy pop culture type of thing. It's about a big truth heading our way, and everyone has a different name for it and various ways of understanding it. If you don,t have any any depth or imagination it will just sail on past you. Feel lucky if you haven't seen it yet, because it's something to look forward to.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Well Meaning, but...
Added 4/13/2008

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.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
FATA MORGANA!
Added 9/17/2006

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.

3 out of 3 people found this helpful.
This movie become more topical as time passes
Added 7/17/2006

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.

9 out of 11 people found this helpful.
Where the Red Tape Rules.
Added 5/20/2006

"Where the Green Ants Dream" remains one of Werner Herzog's most intriguing feature films. Its release was sandwiched in between the controversies, hardships and media outrage of "Fitzcarraldo" and the emotional difficulties of Herzog's final collaboration with Klaus Kinski on "Cobra Verde." The film doesn't quite possess the myth and legend of other Herzog features and as a result as quietly drifted into semi-obscurity. The director himself has aided this drift by his reluctance to discuss the film, as if by his own admission it is a lesser entry in his filmography. Despite this WGAD is visually stunning and easily one of Herzog's most beautifully haunting films. The camera and Herzog is clearly in love with the wide open vistas of the Australian outback, and in their emptiness and vastness they remind one of the desert landscapes glimpsed in "Fata Morgana." From a thematic point of view Herzog continues his quest to chart the dreams and myths of isolated individuals or communities. In this case he explores the most marginal of groups; aborigines. In charting their efforts to stake a legal claim to the land they have inhabited for thousands of years Herzog shows his fury at the bureaucracy and red tape of the modern world. A world of faceless businessmen with capitalist aims living in faceless buildings in faceless capital cities. This is a world which rejects dreams in favour of cold hard facts and figures. The dichotomy between the two worlds is highlighted amusingly by an elevators mechanical failure and one of the aborigines struggling with a digital watch. Herzog fills his films with non-professional aborigine actors and their stiffness and inability in front of camera drains some of the films noble efforts for authenticity.
1 out of 3 people found this helpful.
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