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Into the Inferno (2016)

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An exploration of active volcanoes around the world.

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Cast

Credited cast:
...
Himself
Clive Oppenheimer ...
Himself
Maurice Krafft ...
Himself - Volcanologist (archive footage)
Katia Krafft ...
Herself - Volcanologist (archive footage)
Tim D. White ...
Himself - Paleoanthropologist
Kampiro Kayrento ...
Himself - Fossil Hunter
James Hammond ...
Himself - Geophysicist
Sri Sumarti ...
Himself - Volcanologist
Mael Moses ...
Himself - Chief
Adam Bobette ...
Himself - Researcher
William McIntosh ...
Himself - Volcanologist (archive footage)
Han Myong II ...
Himself - Translator
Kwon Sung An ...
Himself - Historian
Yonatan Sahle ...
Himself - Archaeologist
Yun Yong Gun ...
Himself - Geologist
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An exploration of active volcanoes around the world.

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What we worship can destroy us

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Documentary

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Release Date:

28 October 2016 (USA)  »

Also Known As:

Dentro l'inferno  »

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Did You Know?

Trivia

The twenty-eighth Netflix original documentary. See more »

Quotes

Werner Herzog: It is hard to take your eyes of the fire that burns deep under our feet.
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Connections

References Encounters at the End of the World (2007) See more »

Soundtracks

Recordare jesu pie
Composed by Giuseppe Verdi
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User Reviews

 
Explosively Interesting
18 November 2016 | by (United States) – See all my reviews

Werner Herzog is a captivating man who has grand pursuits and a varied set of interests. He has made many films since his breakout hit, "Aguirre, the Wrath of God," in 1972, and all of them have either been exceptionally interesting, complex, fantastical, or illuminating in nature. Herzog makes both fiction and non-fiction films that deal with issues as diverse as colonialism, the savageness of the wilderness, ecological disasters, opera, and ski flying. With his newest film for Netflix, Herzog once again shows us that fascination is an oft neglected but empowering feeling that can be applied to numerous aspects of life. He starts us off with the topic of volcanoes, but he becomes much more fascinated with humankind at large, evidenced by his own reticence to even get close to a volcano.

Herzog reels us in with the help of Clive Oppenheimer, a Cambridge University volcanologist that he had previously worked with in the documentary, "Encounters at the End of the World," which was a film about Antarctica. Oppenheimer is a playfully compelling, if timid, guide into the world of volcanoes. He and Herzog travel the world and study volcanoes in Indonesia, Iceland, North Korea, and Ethiopia. At each of these junctures, the cultural importance of the volcano is made the fixture of the film, rather than focusing on hard science. The peoples of these regions all seem to be in awe of volcanoes, and either have a deep fear or respect for what it's capable of. In Ethiopia, a nearby volcano is the key to finding fossils of Paleolithic hominids, the rarest of human fossils. In North Korea the region's fierce patriotism is linked with its local volcano where the leaders Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-Il once stood, proudly displaying to their nation that they were strong and resilient in the face of outside vitriol.

Though some of these excursions seem to undercut the fact that this is a film about volcanoes, this film never bores its audience. Between the panoramic shots of tropical foliage and the drone sequences that pan across villages and volcanoes alike, this is a feast for the eyes. There's a great contrast between the beauty of these regions and the oft-confusing shots of the magma that these ruptures expound with horrifying regularity. The inner regions of volcanoes look both like fire and water, and the magma often looks pitifully tame when it moves slowly down a mountainside, though it is actually a most dangerous force that will destroy all in its path. Herzog talks a bit about a couple who were volcanic photographers and were eventually killed by a fast moving cloud of volcanic ash (at 100 mph). While this tidbit is unprompted, it proves to be yet another interesting facet of these quaking mountaintops. Herzog finds many ways to look at these geographic forces, which can be seen as either benevolent or destructive in power.


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