The foreman of a small village glassworks dies without revealing the secret to the famous "Ruby Glass".The foreman of a small village glassworks dies without revealing the secret to the famous "Ruby Glass".The foreman of a small village glassworks dies without revealing the secret to the famous "Ruby Glass".
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe majority of the actors (with the exception of Hias and the glass blowers) were actually hypnotized by Werner Herzog and perform under hypnosis on screen.
- Quotes
[first lines]
Hias: I look into the distance to the end of the world. Before the day is over, the end will come. First, time will tumble, and then the earth. The clouds will begin to race... the earth boils over; this is the sign. This is the beginning of the end. The world's edge begins to crumble... everything starts to collapse... tumbles, fall, crumbles and collapses. I look into the cataract. I feel an undertow, it draws me, it sucks me down. I began to fal, a vertigo seizes upon me.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The South Bank Show: Werner Herzog (1982)
- SoundtracksZäuerli mit Talerschwingen
(uncredited)
[Played during the first scene whilst Hias is watching the herd.]
Heart of Glass takes place in 19th century Bavaria. The Director's comments (always worth hearing after viewing a Herzog film) indicate that Herzog grew up in a place very much like this. This doesn't stop Herzog from turning his keen analysis of the human condition and modal personalities to attack the central problems of life in this time and place. The story involves a small town in crisis. The one person who holds the secret that is the key to the town's prosperity has taken that secret to his grave, and the master of the glass factory in which he worked is losing his mind looking for a solution. Meanwhile, one of the film's more sympathetic character's, a deeply insightful prophet/lunatic shepherd (with no sheep), Hias, predicts an even greater crisis.
Herzog's most consistent theme - his view of human nature - is powerfully illustrated in Heart of Glass. As the great director has often done, Herzog universalizes his view by giving us an essentially alien, dream-like setting and atmosphere. The effect of the cast's hypnotic state is even more jarring than the sheer intensity of Klaus Kinski's performances in many of Herzog's films from this period, and Heart of Glass is as avant-garde as some of his later efforts (such as The Great Blue Yonder). In other words, the average cinema-goer will have a difficult time with this one.
Recommended for Herzog, avant-garde and art-film fans. Not recommended for anybody else.
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Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $3,451
- Runtime1 hour 34 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1