Christian Science Monitor by David Sterritt
Touching, transfixing, unique.
Critic Rating
(read reviews)User Rating
Director
Werner Herzog
Cast
Werner Herzog,
Graham Dorrington,
Annette Scheurich
Genre
Documentary
This 2004 documentary by Werner Herzog diaries the struggle of Grahan Dorrington, a passionate English aeronautical engineer who designed and tested a unique airship during its maiden flight above the jungle canopy.
Christian Science Monitor by David Sterritt
Touching, transfixing, unique.
The New Yorker by Anthony Lane
Werner Herzog may lack heroes, nowadays, who seem adequate to his fierce capacity for wonder. When occasion demands, however, he can still turn the world upside down.
Salon by Andrew O'Hehir
An inexpressibly beautiful and moving film, even though (or because) it seems to be about someone unimportant doing something irrelevant, perhaps something silly, in the face of insurmountable odds and a world that doesn't care.
Chicago Tribune by Michael Wilmington
One of the year's best documentaries.
Variety
Herzog's eye for the weird sometimes makes the docu feel strained, but engaging characters imbue the pic with depth and emotional appeal.
The A.V. Club by Scott Tobias
Herzog also finds extraordinary beauty in what Dorrington is trying to accomplish: Like Jean-Jacques Rousseau in his boat, Dorrington wants to float around the natural world in a reverie, and when he finally does, he experiences a connection with Plage that's genuinely transcendent.
TV Guide Magazine by Ken Fox
An intoxicating dream of a film that speaks to the daydreamer in all of us.
The New York Times by Dana Stevens
The film, which includes some breathtakingly beautiful images of the green, wet Guyanese jungle and a monumental waterfall that cuts through it, is driven less by narrative than by ideas and impressions.
Village Voice by Michael Atkinson
Having emerged from his new German cinema heyday as one of the world's most guileless and original documentary filmmakers, Herzog has slowly been crafting a four-dimensional fresco of the planet, its most human-resistant landscapes, and our dubious dramas in confronting the chaos.
Variety by Russell Edwards
Herzog's eye for the weird sometimes makes the docu feel strained, but engaging characters imbue the pic with depth and emotional appeal.
Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert
Although The White Diamond is entire of itself, it earns its place among the other treasures and curiosities in Herzog's work. Here is one of the most inquisitive filmmakers alive, a man who will go to incredible lengths to film people living at the extremes.
New York Post
Magnificent shots of waterfalls and other natural phenomena abound, but it's far too late in the history of nature photography to expect anyone to gawk at them.
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