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Videodrone's True Stories: 'Into the Abyss'

Werner Herzog's first-person look into the death penalty is one of his finest non-fiction films

By SeanAx Apr 10, 2012 1:05PM

In the past couple of decades, German filmmaker Werner Herzog has become as famous for his provocative, curious, first-person documentaries as for his visionary fiction films. "Into the Abyss" (IFC) is one of his best and most provocative, an engagement with the death penalty in America through this profile of the human beings on both sides of a death penalty verdict in Texas.

 

Michael Perry, convicted of triple homicide in the course of a car theft, is clearly no innocent man and Herzog lays out the senseless brutality of the murders and the consequences of his actions through interviews with the friends and family members of the murder. His point isn't that this is some miscarriage of justice, but of acknowledging that Perry, who was 18 when he committed his crimes, is a human being, and as Herzog says early on, "I don't believe human beings should be executed."

 

Herzog uses police crime scene video and a police detective's commentary to reconstruct the crime but modestly shows no violence or dead bodies on screen, while a field of graves markers (with numbers only, no names on the crosses) and the remembrances of a prison pastor and a former state executioner illustrate the legacy of executed criminals. 


Continue reading at Videodrone


For more releases, see Hot Tips and Top Picks: DVDs, Blu-rays and streaming video for April 10 

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