Wheel of Time (film) explained

Wheel of Time
Director:Werner Herzog
Producer:Lucki Stipetic
Narrator:Werner Herzog
Starring:The Dalai Lama
Takna Jigme Zangpo
Runtime:81 minutes
Country:Germany
United Kingdom
France
Italy
Language:German
English
Distributor:Werner Herzog Filmproduktion

Wheel of Time is a 2003 documentary film about Tibetan Buddhism by German director Werner Herzog. The title refers to the Kalachakra sand mandala that provides a recurring image for the film.[1]

Content

The film documents the two Kalachakra initiations of 2002, presided over by the fourteenth Dalai Lama. The first, in Bodhgaya India, was disrupted by the Dalai Lama's illness. Later that same year, the event was held again, this time without disruption, in Graz, Austria. The film's first location is the Bodhgaya, the site of the Mahabodhi Temple and the Bodhi tree. Herzog then turns to the pilgrimage at Mount Kailash, after which the film then focuses on the second gathering in Graz.

Herzog includes a personal interview with the Dalai Lama,[2] as well as Tibetan former political prisoner Takna Jigme Zangpo, who served 37 years in a Chinese prison for his support of the International Tibet Independence Movement.

Notes and References

  1. News: Holden . Stephen . 2005-06-15 . With Herzog, Inside a World of Devotion . en-US . The New York Times . 2023-05-16 . 0362-4331.
  2. Web site: Gonzalez . Ed . 2005-06-03 . Review: Wheel of Time . 2023-05-16 . Slant Magazine . en-US.