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IMDbPro

Into the Abyss

  • 2011
  • PG-13
  • 1h 47min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.3/10
18 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Into the Abyss (2011)
Conversations death row inmate Michael Perry and those affected by his crime serve as an examination of why people - and the state - kill.
Reproducir trailer2:27
2 videos
26 fotos
CrimenDocumentalDocumental CrimenDrama

Conversaciones con un recluso condenado a muerte y con las víctimas de sus crímenes.Conversaciones con un recluso condenado a muerte y con las víctimas de sus crímenes.Conversaciones con un recluso condenado a muerte y con las víctimas de sus crímenes.

  • Dirección
    • Werner Herzog
  • Guionista
    • Werner Herzog
  • Elenco
    • Werner Herzog
    • Richard Lopez
    • Michael Perry
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.3/10
    18 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Werner Herzog
    • Guionista
      • Werner Herzog
    • Elenco
      • Werner Herzog
      • Richard Lopez
      • Michael Perry
    • 55Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 132Opiniones de los críticos
    • 74Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 2 premios ganados y 13 nominaciones en total

    Videos2

    U.S. Version
    Trailer 2:27
    U.S. Version
    Fred Allen Interview
    Clip 2:10
    Fred Allen Interview
    Fred Allen Interview
    Clip 2:10
    Fred Allen Interview

    Fotos25

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    Elenco principal12

    Editar
    Werner Herzog
    Werner Herzog
    • Self - Narrator
    • (voz)
    Richard Lopez
    • Self - Death House Chaplin
    • (as The Reverend Richard Lopez)
    Michael Perry
    Michael Perry
    • Self - Death Row Inmate
    • (as Michael James Perry)
    Damon Hall
    Damon Hall
    • Self - Montgomery County Sheriff's Department
    Lisa Stolter-Balloun
    Lisa Stolter-Balloun
    • Self - Daughter and Sister to Victims
    Charles Richardson
    • Self - Older Brother of Jeremy
    Jason Burkett
    Jason Burkett
    • Self - Convicted Murderer
    Jared Talbert
    Jared Talbert
    • Self - Citizen of Conroe Texas
    Amanda West
    • Self - Former Bartender
    Delbert Burkett
    Delbert Burkett
    • Self - Jason Burkett's Father
    Melyssa Thompson-Burkett
    Melyssa Thompson-Burkett
    • Self - Jason Burkett's Wife
    • (as Melyssa Burkett)
    Fred Allen
    Fred Allen
    • Self - Former Captain pf Death House Team
    • Dirección
      • Werner Herzog
    • Guionista
      • Werner Herzog
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios55

    7.317.7K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    chaos-rampant

    Engrossing, sobering look into the dramatics of death

    You know and value Herzog because he's one of few these days who can offer a glimpse of cosmologic infrastructure. The wheels and chains that move the world beneath the stories we make up to describe it. What he does, is that he frames chaotic nature where it has a story to tell - say a man living with bears, or an island about to explode - builds this as opera while maintaining the illusion of spontaneous life, blurring document with fiction, then uses this to bring to the surface an image that explains the madness of those stories. A boat being tugged over a hill, as pure as this.

    The story here is about death-row inmates awaiting execution in a Texas penitentiary, structured so that we absorn not just the heinous, meaningless crime but the broader world that leads up to it, allows it to happen, is dependent on and reflects it. Broken homes, unemployment, casual street violence, Herzog provides enough background detail to ground this in a larger systemic failure: so-called civilized society as only a facade of chaotic nature left to seed.

    As with Caves the previous year, the film is talky, dependent on people being able to conjure an experience we only have a handful of images for; the crime scene, dried blood still spattered on the walls, the quietly ominous-looking execution chamber, the prison cemetery lined with crosses of the executed.

    And this is the whole point. Here is a story of immense, sobering power, interviewing a man who will be dead by Monday, but of course Herzog cannot film the moment, much to the chagrin of many. He has to tell a story around it.

    No, the point is that we only have words, memories, stories to say. Many of these are recounted in the film. The execution itself is pieced together from objects and testimonies, very much like we would process a memory. But these stories are still powerful enough to decide life and death. Two were convicted for the crime, and going beyond who pulled the trigger, since both planned for it, only one was sentenced to die.

    This is what is so sobering to me; one man just had a better story to tell the court, more touching drama to explain his being, and we get to note this in the film for a clear effect, he's just more agreeable to listen to, appears more responsible, more level-headed and contrite, whereas the other is just a little wacky. Asked about a story, he blurts out something about monkeys and camp. Herzog himself is markedly disinterested in him, whereas a lot of time is devoted to the man who isn't going to die, a long soliloquy by his guilt-wracked father - serving life in the same prison - that we presume is as sentimental as he pled to the court with it.

    The bitter, hard-to-swallow truth is that this guy's life is simply better movie material, makes for a better story, and this decides life - notice too his wife's sappy story about their first encounter, misty-eyed soap as it is.

    So even though the film seems more streamlined and ordinary for Herzog, talky opposed to visually primal, it is as pure as he ever delivered, perhaps without himself knowing it.

    The whole system we have devised to support life, call it state, society, civilization, is not an infallible, impartial machine but hinges on the bias of storytelling and emotion. The law is arbitrary, equally chaotic as what is meant to organize. At the bottom of that, there is only time and emptiness.

    Observant Herzog fans will note that he used this intertitle - 'Time and Emptiness' - for the closing segment of his Buddhist documentary Wheel of Time. See if you can spot the powerful connection between these two, the floating worlds and ritual they portray.
    10JoeC345

    True Documentation

    The art of making a real documentary has become lost in recent years with filmmakers consistently using stylistic editing and asking questions only to prove the point there trying to make. One thing that struck me with "Into The Abyss" by Werner Herzog was how brilliantly he stayed on task of what he was trying to say. He clearly states once that he does not believe in the death penalty.

    The thing that impressed me the most was how he was never on screen and only asked honest and pertinent questions to all his interviewees without leading them to the answers he wanted. He probed but always let the person say exactly what they wanted to say. He never tries to excuse or romanticize the crime led the one person he interviewed to death row but is firm in his belief that capital punishment is just as much a sin as the crimes perpetrated by the death row inmates

    As I understand it, The United States is one of the last few developed countries that still imposes the death penalty and Texas has the highest rate of death row inmates and the lowest rate of appeals for death row inmates in the nation. While pondering that question you have to ask yourself, "why is that?" is crime being any more deterred by this, I would say no since they still have the highest rate of death row inmates even to this day.

    The commentary by the different people that Herzog talks too is extraordinary. The two that I found to be the best were the father Jason Burkett who is also in prison and the man who was once captain of the guard where Perry was to be executed. This mans conclusion on why the death penalty should not be used is perhaps the best and most profound.

    Herzog poses no enlightening statement at the end and even provides no commentary minus the questions he asks the people he interviews and this is perhaps the best way he could have approached this subject. He let's the viewer determine for themselves what they want to take away from the evidence he provides.

    This is a hard film to review but is a film that should be seen, and the two questions stuck with me even after the film was over, Who has the right to take another life? and, Is there a point where the taking of a life is not a sin?
    intern-88

    A life-affirming rhapsody on the death penalty

    In September 2011, two events reignited the death-penalty debate in America.

    The first came on the seventh of the month at the Republican Presidential Debates in Simi Valley, California. Texas governor Rick Perry was asked by an NBC News correspondent whether he was able to sleep at night, given that his state had executed 234 inmates during his time in office. Before the question was even finished, the audience broke into rapturous applause, cheering the body count.

    Two weeks later came the execution of Troy Davis in Georgia, who had spent 20 years protesting his innocence on death row for killing a security guard in a parking-lot altercation. Nine former witnesses signed affidavits retracting their original statements and claiming they had been coerced by police into identifying Davis. However, in spite of this, and significant pressure from an array of human-rights groups, the Supreme Court refused to overturn Davis's death sentence.

    Coincidentally, German filmmaker Werner Herzog's Into the Abyss: A Tale of Death, A Tale of Life premiered at the Toronto film festival in the weeks between the Californian GOP debate and Davis's execution. The documentary focuses on three murders that took place in a rural Texas town in 2001, for which Jason Burkett and Michael Perry received a life sentence and the death penalty respectively. Due to the film's timeliness, it was rushed for a November release and has now landed on UK screens. Yet while Herzog enters the film making no bones about his opposition to capital punishment, he refuses to exploit his tentative subject for his own political purposes.

    From the outset, Herzog has clearly gone to great lengths to avoid the sort of manipulative didacticism popularised by Michael Moore that has blighted mainstream documentary for the past decade. Whereas he might have chosen to focus on cases of questionable guilt in order to make his case, Herzog opts for a series of murders which are straightforward and frighteningly trivial in their motivations. Both Perry and Burkett continue to place blame on each other, but according to a local cop, who talks us through the case in the film's opening minutes, the two young men killed a middle-aged mother and two teenage boys, all in order to steal the woman's red convertible. Interviewing Perry days before his execution, the victim's families and the state officials involved in the lethal injections that take place in Texas - an average of around two per month since 2001 - the film offers a sombre meditation on the barbarism which survives in modern civilised society.

    Yet there remains in many of these interviews an aching humanity achieved through the plain spectacle of real people talking about deeply affecting moments in their lives. Their candour brings a distinctly life-affirming quality to film, which Herzog comes dangerously close to ruining by his recurring need to put words into the mouths of his subjects.

    With his last project, Cave of Forgotten Dreams, which explored the Chauvet caves and the ancient pre-historic paintings that adorn their walls, Herzog was free to rhapsodise as much as he liked. He brings a similar compulsion to impose his own poetic meaning onto the images to Into the Abyss. During one of the film's most heartrending interviews, in which a former state executioner explains the moment he realised he couldn't continue, Herzog asks 'Was this the first time when you felt like yourself?'. Needless to say, the interviewee looks rather nonplussed. In moments like this, Herzog comes across like an aloof auteur shamelessly attempting to envelop his subjects into his own poignant conception of events.

    While he abstains from narration and never strays from behind the camera, his unmistakable low drawl is a constant and manipulative presence. Similarly his carving of the film into chapters, complete with such melodramatic titles as 'Time and Emptiness', feels like a needless framework that only compromises the manifold beauty of the film.

    With Into the Abyss, Herzog stays true to his word and doesn't allow partisan fingerwagging to distance us from the horror of capital punishment. Unfortunately, his heavy-handed poeticising has much the same effect, interrupting the flow of what is an otherwise gripping and unassuming conversation about the shadowy border between justice and revenge, and the inimitable value of human life.
    8lastliberal-853-253708

    Death and life

    I have seen many Herzog films: Encounters at the End of the World, Rescue Dawn, Grizzley Man, and Aguirre: The Wrath of God, just to name a few. I have always been fascinated with his work.

    Herzog documentaries are notable for using locals instead of professionals to give it a ring of truth. It makes for a more interesting story.

    This film was made 8 days before Michael Perry, a man on death row convicted of murdering Sandra Stotler, a fifty-year-old nurse, was to be executed. He was suspected, but never charged, in two other murders which occurred in Conroe, Texas, with his accomplice Jason Burkett. Perry was convicted eight years earlier of the October 2001 murder, apparently committed in order to steal a car for a joyride. Perry denies that he was responsible for the killings, blaming Burkett (also appearing in the film) who was convicted of the other two murders. Burkett, who received a lesser life sentence for his involvement, likewise blames Perry.

    The tales of all involved, especially the inmate's father, and the warden, were fascinating.
    8SnoopyStyle

    Texas life and death

    Filmmaker Werner Herzog does a documentary about Michael James Perry. He's on death row in Livingston, Texas scheduled to be executed in 8 days. He was convicted along with his friend Jason Burkett for a triple homicide. They killed a housewife in her home to steal a car and then killed two young people to get passcode for the community gate. This is not really a whodunit unless you believe Burkett or even Perry. It's not impossible to believe them and there are certainly people willing to do that. This is really about the whole society in general. It is about the victims. It is about the daughter who lost her family. It is about Burkett's father who watches his various family members get incarcerated along with him. It is about the friend and Herzog who is more interested in him learning to read as an adult. It is about the executioner who had to quit. This is quite a tapestry of Texan life.

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    Argumento

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    • Citas

      Fred Allen: Hold still and watch the birds. Once you get up into your life like that, and once you feel good about your life, you do start watching what the birds do. What the doves are doing. Like the hummingbirds. Why are there so many of them.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Ebert Presents: At the Movies: Episode #2.17 (2011)
    • Bandas sonoras
      End Credits and Incidental Music
      (untitled)

      Composer: Mark De Gli Antoni

      Sebastian Steinberg - guitars and contra bass.

      Lisa Germano - violins.

      David Byrne - guitar.

      Peter Beck - winds.

      Colin Stevens - instrument designs.

      Mark De Gli Antoni - keyboards and percussion.

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    Preguntas Frecuentes

    • How long is Into the Abyss?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 30 de marzo de 2012 (Reino Unido)
    • Países de origen
      • Estados Unidos
      • Reino Unido
      • Alemania
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Xuống Địa Ngục
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Conroe, Texas, Estados Unidos
    • Productoras
      • Creative Differences Productions
      • Skellig Rock
      • Spring Films
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 223,880
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 47,559
      • 13 nov 2011
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 393,714
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 47 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Digital
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.78 : 1

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