With stunning views of eruptions and lava flows, Werner Herzog captures the raw power of volcanoes and their ties to indigenous spiritual practices.
The take
From countries like Finland to North Korea, this amazing documentary explores the most fascinating active volcanoes on our planet. But as it unfolds you realize that Into the Inferno is a movie as much about volcanoes as it is about the people obsessed with them. And who can be called obsessive more than the film’s own director, Werner Herzog, who, with such an explosive career had to eventually make a film about volcanos (bad pun intended). Beautiful scenery, interesting interviews, and Werner’s majestic delivery all make Into the Inferno both an interesting and satisfying documentary.
Comments
Add a comment
Your name
Your comment
UP NEXT
UP NEXT
UP NEXT
More like this in
System Crasher (2019)
A tale of trauma and one of the most talked about movies on Netflix in 2020.
9.0
Fancy Dance (2024)
A thoughtful family drama that celebrates the Indigenous community, while still highlighting their missing loved ones
7.6
Rain (2019)
A girl finds true love in this unusual, marvelous, rain-soaked coming-of-age drama
8.1
Hail Satan? (2019)
Forget everything you think you know about the Satanic Temple
8.0
I Lost My Body (2019)
The Oscar-nominated unconventional animation
8.2
Leave the World Behind (2023)
Shyamalan meets Black Mirror in this hugely entertaining, visually inventive apocalyptic thriller with a killer ending
8.2
Open Your Eyes (1997)
The startlingly surreal Spanish psychothriller that inspired modern cult classic Vanilla Sky
8.0
Wind River (2017)
Sicario's screenwriter directs this story of murder in an Indigenous reserve
9.4
Cold War (2018)
A quiet Polish masterpiece with ravishing music and dazzling visuals
9.2
Wild Tales (2014)
Co-produced by Pedro Almodóvar, this tumultuous Argentine anthology film tests the limits of human sanity when pushed to the extremes – and will also test yours.