We encourage you to purchase tickets directly from the EMPAC box office. You'll avoid paying any service fee, and we'd love to meet you.
Stop by Monday through Friday 9 AM to 6 PM, or two hours prior to any performance. (Box Office hours subject to change.)
You may also purchase tickets by calling 518.276.3921.
Unfiction is a series of documentary films that turn truth into something other than fact, using poetry and imagination, rather than transparency and objectivity. These filmmakers question the very notion of authenticity, and disobey the typical documentary filmmaking practices; instead they stage their own realities on location, employing techniques such as reenactment, personal voice-overs and special effects.
“Few filmmakers make the end of days seem as hauntingly beautiful as Werner Herzog does, or as inexorable.... Encounters at the End of the World has the quality of a dream: it’s at once vivid and vague, easy to grasp and somehow beyond reach."
— Manohla Dargis, The New York Times
“Alternates between spellbinding views of the landscape’s white and blue expanses, conversations with scientists, and interviews with McMurdo’s denizens. Runs the gamut from existential meditation to comedy; indeed, it is perhaps Herzog's funniest film.”
— Sven Lütticken, ArtForum
“The film’s visuals are a wonder to behold. Stunning footage (of) a violent, hermetic world under the ice, populated by myriad strange life-forms.”
— Film Comment
A study of the sublime and the absurd at the southernmost point of the planet, Encouters at the End of the World is Werner Herzog’s most recent documentary, commissioned by the National Science Foundation. From the outset Herzog proclaims that it is “not a film about fluffy penguins”; instead the film examines the psychology of the scientists and technicians who have chosen to live and work in this formidable landscape.
Curator: Emily Zimmerman
Tickets are REQUIRED for this event
Werner Herzog (real name Werner H. Stipetic) was born in Munich on September 5, 1942. He grew up in a remote mountain village in Bavaria and never saw any films, television, or telephones as a child. Since the age of 19 he has produced, written, and directed more than 40 films, published more than a dozen books of prose, and directed as many operas.
Associated with the German New Wave Movement, Herzog's films blur the distinctions between documentary and narrative practice through Herzog’s direct intervention into the context he is filming in order to extract what he has called the "ecstatic truth" of a situation. Please see Herzog's "Minnesota Declaration" reproduced below which was published on the occasion of his 1999 retrospective at the Walker Art Center.
Werner Herzog “Minnesota Declaration” / Truth and fact in documentary cinema
Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota, April 30, 1999
Encounters at the End of the World —