Werner Herzog Made a Documentary About Texting While Driving. And It’s Haunting.
“What AT&T proposed immediately clicked and connected inside of me,” Herzog told the AP. “There’s a completely new culture out there. I’m not a participant of texting and driving—or texting at all—but I see there’s something going on in civilization which is coming with great vehemence at us.”
The result is haunting. It focuses on four accidents, some of them fatal, and Herzog aims his camera squarely at the faces of both victims and perpetrators, asking them to describe in detail what happened and the aftermath. Herzog emphasizes the change in civilization he perceives in part by examining an accident in which an Amish family was killed and another in which a horse-shoer’s truck was involved.
It is not easy viewing, but, for the “more than 40,000 high schools” and “hundreds of safety organizations and government agencies” where it will be shown, I suspect it will be effective. As Herzog says, “In one second, entire lives are either wiped out or changed forever.”
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