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Wheel of Time (2003) More at IMDbPro »


Overview

User Rating:
7.2/10   488 votes
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Down 9% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Director:
Writer:
Werner Herzog (writer)
Contact:
View company contact information for Wheel of Time on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
30 October 2003 (Germany) more
Genre:
Plot:
Wheel of Time is Werner Herzog's photographed look at the largest Buddhist ritual in Bodh Gaya, India. | add synopsis
Plot Keywords:
NewsDesk:
(8 articles)
What Has Werner Herzog Done Now?
 (From IFC. 10 December 2009, 5:26 AM, PST)

Books: Review:Robert Jordan and Brandon Sanderson: The Gathering Storm
 (From The AV Club. 18 November 2009, 10:00 PM, PST)

User Reviews:
The unexpected calmness of Werner Herzog more (8 total)

Cast

  (Credited cast)
Dalai Lama ... Himself
Lama Lhundup Woeser ... Himself
Takna Jigme Sangpo ... Himself
Matthieu Ricard ... Himself
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Madhurita Negi Anand ... Himself
Tenzin Dhargye ... Himself
Ven. Geshe ... Himself

Werner Herzog ... Himself (voice)
Manfred Klell ... Himself
Chungdak D. Koren ... Himself
Thupten Tsering Mukhimsar ... Himself
more

Additional Details

Also Known As:
Kalachakra (Germany) (working title)
Kalachakra - La ruota del tempo (Italy)
Rad der Zeit (Germany)
Ajan pyörä (Finland) [fi]
O trohos tou hronou (Greece) (festival title) [el]
more
Runtime:
81 min | USA:80 min
Color:
Aspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Certification:
Italy:T | Germany:o.Al. | Switzerland:7 (canton of Geneva) | Switzerland:7 (canton of Vaud)
Filming Locations:

FAQ

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9 out of 13 people found the following review useful.
The unexpected calmness of Werner Herzog, 28 March 2004
Author: sleepsev (bearania@yahoo.com) from Bangkok, Thailand

`Wheel of Time' is a very good film, but I admit that it is different from what I expected from Herzog. He is still very talented, but I doubt if the subject matter is best suited to him. `Wheel of Time' concerns many things, including religion, virtue, and faith, which in this case may not be the best subjects for Herzog. But when `Wheel of Time' deals with some strange and crazy rituals, political oppression, and rugged landscapes, these parts of the film are very satisfying.

Some scenes in `Wheel of Time' are magical, especially the scenes which show vast landscapes and people performing strange rituals. Those scenes are Herzogian, I think. Nobody does this kind of thing better than Herzog. If a cinephile watches these scenes, not knowing who shot them, he or she will guess correctly that they were shot by Herzog. These scenes make `Wheel of Time' rise way above television documentaries.

But other scenes are not as magical as I expect from Herzog's films. I think that maybe the religious subject matter of this film doesn't allow Herzog to be as playful in directing as he was in other films. It is very difficult for any filmmaker, including Herzog, to make an interesting documentary about something virtuous like this. It would be much easier to make an interesting film if the film is about `good vs. evil', or about some strange rituals in which people walk on fire and pierce themselves horrifically.

I think Herzog is like a wizard, and one can hardly makes a more magical film than him if the film is about nature-made or man-made madness, brutality, or suffering in life. But because of the subject matter of `Wheel of Time', this film is not my most favorite of Herzog's. I like `Wheel of Time' as much as Herzog's `How Much Wood Would a Woodchuck Chuck' (1976) and `The Flying Doctors of East Africa' (1969). I think these three films are very good films, but because the people portrayed in these films are not `very' strange nor `very' crazy, these three films lack some kind of excitement I found in other films by Herzog, especially when compared to Herzog's `Gesualdo: Death for Five Voices' (1995), `My Best Fiend' (1999), `The Great Ecstasy of Woodcarver Steiner' (1974), and `Land of Silence and Darkness' (1971), which is my most favorite of Herzog's films.

Some parts of Herzog's `Lessons of Darkness' (1992) deal with political madness, and I think Herzog is good at this subject, too. In one scene in `Wheel of Time', a former political prisoner gave an interview about the brutality of the Chinese rule. This scene is very simple. It is just a normal interview. But for me the power of this scene is much more stronger than most scenes in `Wheel of Time'. And it also reminds me of some great scenes in `Lessons of Darkness' in which some people gave their own testimonies to what happened when Saddam invaded Kuwait. I think one thing that makes the scene about the former prisoner stand apart from other scenes in `Wheel of Time' is because this scene talks about `evil forces', while other scenes in `Wheel of Time' are about some kind of virtuous power.

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