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Le pays où rêvent les fourmis vertes

Original title: Wo die grünen Ameisen träumen
  • 1984
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
Le pays où rêvent les fourmis vertes (1984)
Drama

A geologist employed by an Australian mining company finds himself disputing the rights of some aborigines who believe their land to be sacred.A geologist employed by an Australian mining company finds himself disputing the rights of some aborigines who believe their land to be sacred.A geologist employed by an Australian mining company finds himself disputing the rights of some aborigines who believe their land to be sacred.

  • Director
    • Werner Herzog
  • Writers
    • Werner Herzog
    • Bob Ellis
  • Stars
    • Bruce Spence
    • Wandjuk Marika
    • Roy Marika
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    2.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Werner Herzog
    • Writers
      • Werner Herzog
      • Bob Ellis
    • Stars
      • Bruce Spence
      • Wandjuk Marika
      • Roy Marika
    • 18User reviews
    • 24Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 2 nominations total

    Photos53

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    Top cast36

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    Bruce Spence
    Bruce Spence
    • Lance Hackett
    Wandjuk Marika
    Wandjuk Marika
    • Miliritbi
    Roy Marika
    Roy Marika
    • Dayipu
    Ray Barrett
    Ray Barrett
    • Cole
    Norman Kaye
    Norman Kaye
    • Baldwin Ferguson
    Ralph Cotterill
    Ralph Cotterill
    • Fletcher
    Nick Lathouris
    Nick Lathouris
    • Arnold
    Basil Clarke
    Basil Clarke
    • Judge Blackburn
    Ray Marshall
    • Solicitor General Coulthard
    Dhungala I. Marika
    Dhungala I. Marika
    • Malila 'The Mute'
    Gary Williams
    Gary Williams
    • Watson
    Tony Llewellyn-Jones
    Tony Llewellyn-Jones
    • Fitzsimmons
    Robert Brissenden
    • Professor Stanner
    Bob Ellis
    • Supermarket manager
    Michael Edols
    • Young attorney
    Susan Graeves
    • Secretary
    Marraru Wunungmurra
    • Daisy Barunga
    Max Fairchild
    Max Fairchild
    • Police Officer
    • Director
      • Werner Herzog
    • Writers
      • Werner Herzog
      • Bob Ellis
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    6.92.7K
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    Featured reviews

    10Prof_Lostiswitz

    Travails With My Ant

    I hadn't thought that Herzog was capable of making a good film without Kinski, only some pretentious artsy thing like Heart of Glass.

    Well, Green Ants proves me wrong. This is a great film that shows the conflict between white and aboriginal civilizations without being sentimental or condescending to either side. With Hollywood we'd some cliché about noble savages and suchlike, but here you get the feeling of dealing with real human beings.

    Oh yeah, the plot deals with an Australian mining company that wants to blow up a sacred site to do mineral exploitation. Herzog avoids stereotyped poses to bring out the situation as it would occur in real life. Plus you get some great shots of the outback.

    I plan to lend this one to all my aboriginal friends!
    10Preston-10

    How would you like it if Someone Tore Down Your Church?

    I would classify this movie as being Herzog's most mainstream (which I know isn't saying that much), but still, for a movie that takes place in possibly the most minimalist setting (a stretch of land on the Australian outback littered with the remains of drilling for minerals) I found it absolutely engrossing. This is the movie: A group of aborigines refuse to budge from a small strip of land when a mining company wants to occupy it for drilling purposes; their reason: `This is the land where the green ants dream'. When one of the aborigines is asked why they will not budge even after offered a lucrative settlement, he responds, `How would you like it if someone drove a bulldozer over your church.' Immediately I knew this movie would work. It is a very good film, possibly one of the most finely put together movies I can think of. Rather than being an all and out movie that puts down imperialism, civilization, and national need to exploit resources.it raises some interesting questions about ownership and the present destruction of ancient civilizations. My one fault with the movie is that you know when Herzog is setting things up for an awe-inspired moment, and it does get a little dry toward the end, but still a grand achievement.
    10wlebing

    Excellent study on human nature....

    This film has been ignored by the mainstream media. It portrays the futile struggle of an Aboriginal tribe against the needs of civilization. From the first confrontation you know how it will end, but you keep hoping that perhaps the mindless and soul-less rush of progress won't wipe out one more culture.

    Herzog captures the story in a series of vignettes, each one expressing a fleeting thought or detail.

    At one point Bruce Spence is trying to explain his theory of space and time to one of the elders, who rebukes him. His reply to the elder is "I'm trying to understand, really I am." The movie is a predecessor to "Rabbit Proof Fence". It makes you realize that as a society we just don't get it.

    I highly recommend it.
    lblarson1

    where the green ants dream, a film that begs the question, where do we dream

    I really liked this movie. I liked the respect that was offered and given by both the native demonstrators and the geologist. This film prompted thought, thought about what is valued when death approaches, whether that is seen as death of an individual or a people. The mining company stands on the foundation of its legal right to proceed with what the contemporary civilization values, and some scoff the values of the natives. But if we listen we hear that is something we all must address when asking of ourselves what is sacred and will we protect and defend that in the face of our own extinction, because clearly the law is not designed to protect the sacred, but to settle a dispute. We are an amalgam of the characters, the native voice that seeks self perpetuation of tribe and story, the company voice that works for progress and acquisition of wealth, the mediator and thinker voice that comes through the geologist, and the law which strives of order in chaos. These tensions of the human condition, are made so vivid in the land and skies of the Australian outback.
    9artzau

    A Neglected and Unknown Classic

    I'm invariably surprised when I mention this film to friends that they say they've never seen it. Werner Herzog in Australia? C'mon. How could the great German director of Wozzeck, Nosferatu and other Gothic classics concern himself with a very oblique tale of a development project impeded by Aboriginal Australians who contend that disturbing the green ants dreams by ripping up their habitat will likewise rip the fabric of the universe? The government solution is to give them an airplane which one of the younger members of their tribe eventually manages to take off with a number of the elders on board. Looking over the cast, you likely not recognize names that most of us who don't follow Aussie films know; some of us may know Bruce Spence from the Mad Max films who plays a geologist, but there are many Australian Aborigines. A poignant moment is seen in the court room scene where one Aborigine rises to speak and the judge asks for a translation, only to be told the men is called "the Mute" because there's no one left who understands his tribal language.

    The overall effect of the film is wonderfully Herzog with a surrealistic portrayal of the clash of old and new, progress versus conservation and fraught with cultural miscommunication. I really recommend this film for your viewing.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The whole story of the green ants was made up by Werner Herzog, it's not a part of genuine Aboriginal folklore. However the courtroom incident where a secret artifact is revealed, to the bemusement of the judge, is based on a real incident.
    • Quotes

      Lance Hackett: The situation, your Honor, is this man is the the sacred custodian to the secrets of this tribe. And his tribe has died out. He is the sole and final survivor of his people, his clan. They call him the mute, because there is nobody left on this earth for him to speak with.

    • Connections
      Featured in Bis ans Ende... und dann noch weiter. Die ekstatische Welt des Filmemachers Werner Herzog (1989)
    • Soundtracks
      Requiem Op. 48
      Music by Gabriel Fauré

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    FAQ16

    • How long is Where the Green Ants Dream?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 12, 1984 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • West Germany
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Where the Green Ants Dream
    • Filming locations
      • The Breakaways, Coober Pedy, South Australia, Australia
    • Production companies
      • Werner Herzog Filmproduktion
      • Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen (ZDF)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 40 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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