Lo And Behold, Reveries Of The Connected World < ULTIMATE ✮ >
The film isn't a dry history lesson. Instead, it’s a series of ten "reveries" that explore how the internet has reshaped what it means to be human. Here are the highlights of this strange, beautiful, and slightly unsettling journey. From the Birth of the "LOG"
While most of us are tethered to our smartphones, Herzog finds those who have retreated from the digital world: Lo and Behold, Reveries of the Connected World
When you think of Werner Herzog, you probably picture him in a parka on an Alaskan glacier or deep in the Amazonian jungle. You don't usually imagine him pondering the silicon chips and fiber-optic cables that power our digital existence. Yet, in his documentary Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World , the legendary filmmaker treats the internet exactly like one of his wild, untamable landscapes—as a place of both "ecstatic truth" and profound, terrifying chaos. The film isn't a dry history lesson
Herzog starts at the very beginning: , the birthplace of the internet. We see the first interface message processor—a machine that looks more like a military-grade refrigerator than a computer. It’s here that the first message, "LOGIN," was attempted. The system crashed after the first two letters, leaving the very first digital transmission as a simple, prophetic "LO" . The Dark Side of Connection From the Birth of the "LOG" While most
Does the Internet Dream of Itself? A Deep Dive into Werner Herzog’s Lo and Behold
Herzog doesn't shy away from the internet's "Antichrist" potential. In one of the film's most harrowing segments, he interviews the family of , whose tragic death was weaponized by anonymous trolls who sent gruesome photos to her grieving parents. It’s a stark reminder that while the internet connects us, it also provides a veil for the most "unimaginably ugly" human behaviors. The Modern Hermits