Like a novelist practicing
with short stories before attempting the grand statement of a first novel, the
singular German filmmaker Werner Herzog made a number of documentaries and
short-subject fiction films before mounting his first two fictional features, Signs of Life (1968) and this strange
picture. Yet because he followed up these intimate projects with the ambitious Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972), it’s
tempting to look at early projects including Even Dwarfts Stated Small as the byproducts of apprenticeship. For
while Even Dwarfs Started Small
contains some of Herzog’s signature themes and is suffused with his
idiosyncratic style, it’s trifling compared to the powerful allegories he made
later.
Plus, truth be told, Even Dwarfs
Started Small is a gimmick picture, because it’s a black-and-white oddity
featuring only little people. The limitations of gimmickry become evident as Even Dwafts Started Small trudges along:
It’s hard to get emotionally invested in a fictional feature populated
exclusively by nonprofessional actors playing interchangeable roles. There’s
something bold about the way Herzog asks viewers to plunge into the deepest
waters of his imagination, but boldness only goes so far.
Set on a remote
island off the northern coast of Africa, the picture depicts a rebel uprising
at an asylum or some other sort of institution. The gist is that the
inmates/patients/residents dislike the way they’re treated, so they cut off
communication with the outside world and lay siege to administrators until
chaos reigns. Despite copious amounts of dialogue, much of which is
deliberately cryptic and/or peculiar, so it’s never especially clear just what’s
happening, though the film seems to take an antiauthoritarian stance. (For
instance, rebels toss rocks at an administrator while he speaks to them from a
high rooftop.)
Mostly, the threadbare plot provides Herzog with an excuse to
capture weird images. A camel too groggy or ill to stand on its forelegs. Rebels
shoving a car down a seemingly bottomless hole in the ground. A driverless
vehicle spinning in circles. A man holding a tube of cream over his crotch and
spurting the cream onto a nearby woman. And so much giggling. At times, it
feels like half this film’s screen time is devoted to shots of characters
laughing idiotically. Herzog has never been afraid to stop a story dead so he
can linger on some odd tangent, but Even
Dwarfts Started Small is nothing but tangents, and the lack of a larger
purpose renders the whole enterprise somewhat pointless, beyond the inherent
value of putting onscreen people whose life experiences are rarely explored in
popular culture.
Even Dwarfs Started Small: FUNKY
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