 In 1994, a group of scientists discovered a cave in Southern France  perfectly preserved for over 20,000 years and containing the earliest  known human paintings. Knowing the cultural significance that the  Chauvet Cave holds, the French government immediately cut-off all access  to it, save a few archaeologists and paleontologists. But documentary  filmmaker, Werner Herzog, has been given limited access, and now we get  to go inside examining beautiful artwork created by our ancient  ancestors around 32,000 years ago. He asks questions to various  historians and scientists about what these humans would have been like  and trying to build a bridge from the past to the present.
In 1994, a group of scientists discovered a cave in Southern France  perfectly preserved for over 20,000 years and containing the earliest  known human paintings. Knowing the cultural significance that the  Chauvet Cave holds, the French government immediately cut-off all access  to it, save a few archaeologists and paleontologists. But documentary  filmmaker, Werner Herzog, has been given limited access, and now we get  to go inside examining beautiful artwork created by our ancient  ancestors around 32,000 years ago. He asks questions to various  historians and scientists about what these humans would have been like  and trying to build a bridge from the past to the present.Oct 24, 2011
Cave of Forgotten Dreams (Werner Herzog, 2011)
 In 1994, a group of scientists discovered a cave in Southern France  perfectly preserved for over 20,000 years and containing the earliest  known human paintings. Knowing the cultural significance that the  Chauvet Cave holds, the French government immediately cut-off all access  to it, save a few archaeologists and paleontologists. But documentary  filmmaker, Werner Herzog, has been given limited access, and now we get  to go inside examining beautiful artwork created by our ancient  ancestors around 32,000 years ago. He asks questions to various  historians and scientists about what these humans would have been like  and trying to build a bridge from the past to the present.
In 1994, a group of scientists discovered a cave in Southern France  perfectly preserved for over 20,000 years and containing the earliest  known human paintings. Knowing the cultural significance that the  Chauvet Cave holds, the French government immediately cut-off all access  to it, save a few archaeologists and paleontologists. But documentary  filmmaker, Werner Herzog, has been given limited access, and now we get  to go inside examining beautiful artwork created by our ancient  ancestors around 32,000 years ago. He asks questions to various  historians and scientists about what these humans would have been like  and trying to build a bridge from the past to the present.
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Ne treba ici na drugu planetu da bi se nasla magija iz snova... Sve je to tu negde, oko nas... A cika Werner nam mnogo lepo prica i slika o tome!
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