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Ten Thousand Years Older

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Directed by
  
Werner Herzog

Written by
  
Werner Herzog

Cinematography
  
Vicente Rios

Director
  
Werner Herzog

Music director
  
Paul Englishby

Cast
  
Werner Herzog


Produced by
  
Lucki Stipetic

Narrated by
  
Werner Herzog

Edited by
  
Joe Bini

Screenplay
  
Werner Herzog

Producer
  
Lucki Stipetić

Ten Thousand Years Older httpsiytimgcomvi6PqFuFDXdTsmaxresdefaultjpg

Initial release
  
19 December 2002 (Germany)

Similar
  
Handicapped Future, The Flying Doctors of East Africa, Echoes from a Sombre E, Huie's Sermon, No One Will Play with Me

Ten Thousand Years Older is a 2002 documentary film by Werner Herzog about the Amondauas (Uru Eus) people of Brazil. The ten-minute film was produced and included as part of the Ten Minutes Older project, released in the collection The Trumpet.

Synopsis

The film opens with stock footage of the Amondauas' first contact with modern Brazilians in 1981. Herzog states that they had previously only a "stone age existence", with no knowledge of metalworking. Within several years, the majority of the tribe had been wiped out, most killed by chicken pox and the common cold.

Herzog visits the tribe twenty years after their first contact. He discusses the elders' opinions on their new life, as well as the children's. The elders long for their previous lives as jungle warriors, while the children are embarrassed by their parents and want to live as modern Brazilians.

References

Ten Thousand Years Older Wikipedia