Little Dieter Needs to Fly (1997) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
41 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
9/10
A Complete Work
42ndStreetMemories7 April 2006
I had the opportunity to see this last evening at a local film festival. Herzog introduced the film and did an hour long Q&A afterward.

This is a brilliantly done "documentary"; Herzog explained afterward that he does not consider his films to be true documentary since facts sometimes camouflage the truth. Instead he scripts some scenes and ad-libs some to introduce a new element that may have been missed if he followed the original story outline.

Little Dieter, unlike Timothy Treadwell, is a real person that you fall in love with; you cheer for him, you feel the anguish that he feels. You admire the sense of humor and joy for life that he exhibited here 30 years after he was taken into captivity by the Viet Cong. You are disappointed to hear afterward that Dieter passed on not too long ago.

As in most Herzog films, the imagery is breathtakingly beautiful with a wonderful choice of background music. Especially a scene of battle taken from archives of the Viet Nam war but fitting the story line of Dieter.

The core of the film has Dieter return to the hellish jungle where he was a POW and he re-enacts his journey with some locals. Harrowing for us to watch, I can't imagine what he felt as he was bound again.

One of the better films to depict and discuss the nightmare of the Viet Nam war. It should serve as a lesson to us all.
19 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
I Don't Give 10s, However...
vkfqlurjqztbolk13 January 2021
One word: wow.

I am not inclined to give a 10-star rating to any documentary. However, if I did, this would be the one so far.

Mr. Hertzog's story-telling provided me with a few gut-wrenching moments, all of them captivating.

And Mr. Dieter's story is beyond compelling, and was, at times, difficult to experience. Nonetheless, I view him as a man of admirable, almost superhuman proportions, and a hero indeed.

All in all, a very worthy investment of my time, and I give it my highest recommendation.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Werner Herzog needs to narrate my life
wandereramor7 February 2013
Little Dieter Needs to Fly tells the story of Dieter Dengler, an Air Force pilot who was shot down in Vietnam and miraculously survived in the jungle for quite some time. In other hands this narrative could become maudlin, melodramatic, and jingoistic, but fortunately we have Werner Herzog and his trademark thickly-accented narration to remind us that all in life is futile. We have the perverse, hopeless landscape of a film like Lessons of Darkness, but Dieter's story gives us at least a mild hope of escaping that world. At times the power of the story and Dengler's matter-of-fact recounting of it overpowers Herzog's heavy stylizing, and a times they work together. It's a quite interesting dynamic.

Some of the filming choices don't quite work -- take, for instance, the decision to have Dengler re-enact some aspects of his captivity with confused-looking Vietnamese villagers -- whereas others are downright moving -- the Mongolian throat-music, or the final shot of the field full of airplanes, suggesting how the government weaponizes and exploits the childish desire to fly. There are also times where one could accuse the film of being a simple "inspiring" survival story, but I think for the most part it rises above that genre while simultaneously serving as the best example of it.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An Unforgettable Film
howard.schumann30 September 2002
"I'm not a hero. Only people who are dead are heroes." - Dieter Dengler

Little Dieter Needs to Fly, a 1997 documentary by Werner Herzog of the life of Vietnam war-hero Dieter Dengler, begins with a quotation from the Book of Revelations: "And in those days shall men seek death, and shall not find it, and shall desire to die, and death shall flee from them." As the film starts, Dieter walks into a tattoo shop in San Francisco and looks at a painting of Death in a fiery, horse-drawn chariot. "Death didn't want me," he says, referring to his survival after six months in a Viet Cong prison camp.

Herzog documents Dengler's life from his childhood in Wildburg in the Black Forest region of Germany to his escape and rescue from Laos. Growing up in Germany during World War II, Dengler listened to the constant sound of Allied planes overhead and dreamed of becoming a pilot. "As a child," Herzog says in voice-over, "Dieter saw things that made no earthly sense at all. Germany had been transformed into a dreamscape of the surreal." Dieter came to the United States when he was only 18, joined the Navy and was trained to become a pilot. He moved to California and was sent to Vietnam in 1966. "It all looked strange", Dieter says, "like a distant barbaric dream". On his first mission as a pilot, Dieter was shot down and captured by the Pathet Lao, then later turned over to the Viet Cong. He remained a prisoner in Laos for six months.

Told through archival footage, dream sequences, recreations in actual jungle locations, exotic music, and surreal imagery, the film is divided into four chapters, each representing a period from Dengler's life. Like a Greek tragedy, Herzog has named the sequences: The Man, His Dream, Punishment, and Redemption. Little Dieter Needs to Fly is not a linear documentary, but a very personal and poetic film, similar in a way to Agnes Varda's documentary essay, "The Gleaners and I". Having long been fascinated with the experience of men in jungles (Aguirre, the Wrath of God, Fitzcarraldo) and having himself grown up in Germany during the war, Herzog provides a voice-over commentary that is as much about himself as it is about Dieter Dengler.

Dieter tells his gruesome tale in a strangely chatty, matter-of-fact manner without anger or bitterness, almost nonchalantly recounting mind-numbing details of his captivity and torture. He does not try to place the events in a historical or political context or to comment on the rights and wrongs of the war, but provides a strictly personal account of his survival against overwhelming odds.

Footage of both bombed out German cities in World War II and bombs lighting up the dense foliage over the Vietnam jungle make the experience very vivid. Dvorak and Bach, Tibetan throat singing, and native African chants are brilliantly interspersed to add depth and beauty to the experience. A chant from Madagascar, "Oay Lahy E", sung while Dieter walks through a sea of fighter planes, adds a final transcendent touch. Little Dieter Needs to Fly is an unforgettable film that moves beyond the limitations of the genre to become a moving testament to both the absurdity of war and the resilience of the human spirit.

NOTE: Be sure to watch past the end credits. There is a postscript on the DVD that truly completes the experience.
52 out of 53 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
extraordinary
nienhuis28 November 2005
I consider this a breathtaking but deceptive film because it seems so simple and straightforward: a Vietnam survivor tells his harrowing tale and some of the story is reenacted on location. Reviewers sometimes even claim that Herzog's presence in the film is minimal, but how wrong they are. We know that all documentaries are "mediated" to some extent and this one has Herzog's subtle hand all over it, most notably in the stunning music, the unbelievably expert selection of archival footage, and the management of cascading images. The evocative power of this film is astounding, starting with its title, the opening title card from the book of "Revelation," and the initial voice-over. This is a movie that one can watch repeatedly with increasing wonder, not a simple commodity that is gulped down with one's favorite beverage on the way to the evening news. This is one of those movies that can resonate with you for a lifetime.
35 out of 36 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Documentary at its best
gjlmovie471129 August 2001
This film is excellent! Fear of watching documentary movies? Cancel your shrink and watch little Dieter's story. You won't believe how captivating this fine piece of film making is until you have experienced it. I'm eager to say that it even out goes almost any Vietnam war movie, including Apocalypse Now. It's a real story, it's a personal story, a story about the love for flying, the dream of being a pilot and the nightmare of being shot down above enemy's territory. All is shot in a "return to..." style - at location, Herzog asking the questions, Dieter answering them in a memorable German-English accent, and with fine remembrance pointing out what happened where about 25 years before. There is this part that I told friends over and over again: bailed out from his US Navy plane, Dieter becomes a POW of the Vietcong. Blindfolded for the greater part of the days, he is being dragged through the Southeast Asian jungle for miles and miles - on bare feet. Tortured, insulted, disorientated, hungered and covered with infected wounds, they arrive in a small, friendly village to spend the night. The next morning, after walking for several hours, Dieter discovers someone stole his wedding ring from his finger. That is it. He can take no more. He starts to cry, as a result of complete exhaustion. The Vietcong men react surprised. Dieter manages to explain what happened. Immediately, the group returns to the village and starts searching for the person that stole the ring. They find the man, immediately chop of his finger and return the ring to Dieter. - The movie is full of these mind boggling and surprising situations. The immense cultural differences, the clash of East and West, the fear of the unknown (i.e. all that stands for America on the one hand, the Asian jungle and his secrets on the other) can be sensed the entire movie. Back problems? That's because you sat at the edge of your seat for two hours and didn't notice.
27 out of 29 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Impressive ! & Touching
Moviespot10 November 2007
Wow.this is a touching story! First i saw 'Rescue Dawn'.I didn't 'like' it. And now i have seen the person , Dieter Dengler , about whom this story is being told by Herzog.Very Impressing.Dieter is a driven human being who encountered the most opposite emotions in his live on this earth.what an extraordinary life this person has led. His tale about the capture by the Patet Lao/Vietcong and thus his suffering is horrifying but what's most impressive is his incredible will to survive.How could he find the strenght ? In a haunting way , Dieter is telling us in full flowing sentences about his terrible ordeal during his captivity... he is a great storyteller and Herzog does him the justice this brave man deserves.

In my opinion.'Little Dieter needs to fly ' tells it all ! , leaving nothing to the imagination , thus making ' Rescue dawn ' a superfluous film. The horror doesn't get more real than in the words of Dieter Dengler himself.He totally succeeds in painting the picture.
13 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Simple recommendation: SEE IT! Advanced: SEE IT!
Bod7 February 1999
Little Dieter Needs to Fly was my first film during the 1999 edition of the Göteborg Filmfestival. As I was extremely tired that evening, I was hesitant to see it, but the raving overall score of 9 here at IMDB made me go there.

It was 80 minutes of pure life-force! Experiencing Dieter Denglers life through his own telling was enchanting.

SEE IT! And if possible... see it at a cinema!
16 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Not a Hero's Tale
palmiro16 July 2016
While Herzog provides his usual share of directorial novelties (including a "re-enactment" of Dieter's trek through the Laotian jungle with his captors--but not carried to the extent of re- enacting the tortures he went through), it's hard to see why this miraculous death-avoiding trek of Dieter's is any more worthy of a documentary than, say, a survivor's story of a Wehrmacht soldier walking his way back to Germany from the Russian front. In both instances, it's a tale of an individual surviving death at every turn--and not a tale of the slaughterhouse that dealt death to millions of people over the course of a war.

And while a Wehrmacht soldier's tale of survival might well include war crimes committed against civilians, Dieter's tale can hardly avoid that part of the tale--with the difference that the crimes committed by the soldiers of the Wehrmacht were never reported for the most part, whereas we have vivid technicolor imagery (incorporated into Herzog's film as well) of the horrors inflicted on the people of Vietnam.

Herzog's usage of historical footage of US bombing runs may indeed convey a deeply unsettling sensation of the contrast between the "glorious" technicolor pyrotechnics and the imaged horror felt by the people living the experience on the ground--and, I suppose, that's to Herzog's credit. But, in the end, this tale of an American pilot's escape from a POW camp--a tale that so defies credibility that it must be true--ends up endowing the protagonist with a hero's status. It's true enough that Dieter refuses the label "hero" (because "only the dead can be heroes"), but he also evidences not one iota of remorse for his participation in the war.

And this is the problem: A hero must be someone who embodies and realizes in his deeds the noblest virtues and values of our culture. Being a willing combatant in a war initiated by the US and that led to the deaths of between a million and a half and 4 million people for no good reason is not the stuff of heroes.
3 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Profound, moving, and masterfully told story!!!
kinoeye137 October 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This film stands as one of the most amazing examples of compelling and artful film-making I've every seen. Herzog seems to capture the almost transcendent tragedy and beauty of Dieter's story, as well as his endearing personal character. By the end of the film, I was left wishing that I'd had the opportunity to meet Dieter before his passing.

On a technical note, the cinematography is intimate and astoundingly beautiful. The narrative is intricately woven, with great awareness of the subject and his capacity for reliving and reenacting traumatic events. Few documentary directors have so strong an ability to so thoroughly invest the audience in the character. This film is a must see!!!
6 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Werner Herzog doc
SnoopyStyle6 November 2015
Dieter Dengler was a child in Germany during WWII. His father died in the military. During an Allied air attack, he is in awe of the planes and determines that "Little Dieter Needs to Fly". Post-war Germany suffered severe shortages. He immigrates to America as an 18 year old. He joins the Air Force but ends up in the kitchen and the motorpool. He leaves for college and then the Navy. He finally gets the chance to fly. In 1966, Dieter flies his single-engine, propeller attack plane Skyraider into Laos and gets shot down. He is captured. Eventually, the prisoners break out of their jungle prison.

Documentary filmmaker Werner Herzog uses his unconventional style to bring Dieter's story to life. Herzog's voice is ever present. He even brings Dieter back to the jungle and recreates his journey. It's a fascinating story but I'm not sure Herzog's style works to bring out the intensity. It has an awkward surrealism but fascinating nevertheless.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
you almost can't believe a man like Dieter existed, but here he is, in brilliant Herzogian detail
Quinoa198425 January 2007
We see at the beginning of Little Dieter Needs to Fly Dieter Dengler, the subject of the film, an obsessive-compulsive. Or at least that's what he seems to be by way of constantly opening/closing doors and with his large stock-pile of food in the cellar. In a way director Werner Herzog sets up a central question, in a manner of speaking, to why Dieter is like this. Well, in fact, he's not necessarily obsessive-compulsive as he is just, well, prepared. And why shouldn't he be after the life he's lived? Aside from the juiciest, most dark and exhilarating and frightening and just downright haunting story of survival that's the core of the picture, the back-story to Dieter is fascinating too. Dieter's own childhood, for example, was already a slog from the start, being in post-war Germnay, poor in a family without much food or prospects, eating wallpaper for "the blue in the walls". But enter in a passion, an un-yielding desire (which, of course, is part of Herzog's bread & butter and love of man in his films), which is flying, and for Dieter there was nothing else but to fulfill this. What it ends up leading to, after becoming an American citizen, is more than he could've bargained for.

Dieter is one of Herzog's most compelling, quirky, and compassionately observed figures in his whole career, a man who's memory is scarred by brutal memories of his time being a Vietnam POW, though at the least it provides for some of the most compelling storytelling in any documentary of the last 20 years. Ironically, the storytelling comes through- unlike in The Wild Blue Yonder- mostly in lots and lots of exposition from Dieter on some of the most minute details of his time in the different prison camps (the torture tactics, the bugs, the brutal, wretched violence and threats like with the wedding ring tale), and leading into the most interesting and sad portions with his best friend Duane. They escaped the prisons together, but found that their journey to reach Cambodia would not be so easy. Now, through most of this, the talking does something that is enthralling, which is that as Dieter goes through his stories and occasionally does re-enactments (in fashion Herzog could only do, with Dieter already middle-aged being led in handcuffs et all through the jungle), one can picture all of this in the mind. It all becomes even more vivid to try and get these little details and the intensity of it all together into a form of reality. That Herzog keeps these portions simple, and knows when to hold Dieter back in his answers, makes him all the more a key figure of interest. He's not ever totally 'normal', but unlike a Timothy Treadwell, you wont think ever really about laughing at him either.

So, along with his hero (whether of war or not is hard to say, as Dieter disputes that claim as saying the ones who died were the real heroes, typical but perhaps quite true), Herzog stylizes his film with a mix of old stock footage when detailing Dieter's early life (the period footage of WW2 scenes and post German rubble is always a captivating sight, and with Herzog gets up a notch in his timing and assemblage with music), and in capturing the footage of Vietnam in aerial viewings of jungles and fields. Herzog is also very wise at not injecting politics much at all into the proceedings, there's no 'I was used by the Americans' or whatever thrown into the mix. There's even a sense that Dieter doesn't hold too much of a grudge with everything that happened to him, that it's just what happens in time of war (and, of course, he WAS dropping bombs on people from his plane). Now, through much of these harrowing- and even in the smaller bits involving what went on in prisons, bathrooms and the scraps of food it's always harrowing- luckily Herzog keeps a level of humor in check as well. One of my very favorite scenes in the film, where Herzog breaks away for a moment from Dieter, is when he shows a 'trainee' film used for American soldiers meant to show what should happen in case they get abandoned in the jungle alone...with all of the gear that they could possibly have including a knife, a flare gun, and a very fast helicopter to come around (and this is put to hilariously dead-pan voice-over work).

Yet even the moments where one laughs only brings to mind the moments of absurdity in a time of absolute crisis, and how one can't ever really imagine what it's like to be alone in a foreign territory surrounded by people who will do anything to keep said person as a form of collateral in war-time. Dieter, aside from knowing that flying and airplanes are the only way of life he would ever want to have (and Herzog ends the film on a wonderfully somber, elegiac note where he flies over a large field of airplanes), knows what it is to have to survive at all costs. But yet, as well, as in many of Herzog's protagonist driven films, there's the near unalterable spirit that will keep on enduring if one's strong enough, even through horrid moments (the fate of Dunae) and problems all the way up to the rescue by the helicopter (is he American, or a spy, they ask on the chopper). Dieter is such a man with a spirit, and he's given via Herzog a fantastic, tragic, creative, well-shot, albeit maybe too short, tribute to his life. And, of course, it pumps me up even more for the upcoming dramatization Rescue Dawn.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Life is an open door
Horst_In_Translation22 September 2022
Warning: Spoilers
"Little Dieter Needs to Fly" is a co-production between Germany, the United Kingdom and France from 1997, so this one has its 25th anniversary this year already, but this was not really the reason why it was shown on the big screen one more time yesterday, but the reason was that the place where it was shown held an exhibition to honor filmmaker Werner Herzog on the occasion of his recent 80th birthday. There you also have the key component to this film being a German production, namely filmmaker Herzog in charge of writing and directing here. The man this is about is Dieter Dengler and he is also from Germany, but, just like Herzog, had a great connection with the United States in his lifetime. Dengler died in 2001 already, so also a long time ago sadly and he did not get too old, only slightly over 60. Dengler was the only American airplane pilot who managed to escape from a communist prison camp when he was over there in Asia. Actually, he managed to get away from his captors before that already, but got caught again near the water when he was looking for something to drink and they knew exactly where they would find him. His second attempt, however, turned out successful. Now we are deep into the subject already, but let's stay with the basics first for now.: This is a relatively short documentary at only under 80 minutes and it was nominated for a Primetime Emmy even, which is not a given for a non-American production, even if Herzog is a big name in America of course, lives there too and was also fairly famous back then this was made. Besides, with who this was about and the entire subject, it was also a very American documentary without a doubt. Patriotic even. That may have helped, even if it did not win the Emmy, but lost to an even shorter documentary that dealt with crime directly in America apparently and also included a race component. Like so many do now as well.

But back to this one here: Some may say it is as much about Herzog as it is about Dengler, but I would not agree. We hear Herzog and see him occasionally as well, but only very briefly and the narration parts are also not too frequent, especially in the second half. Besides, we have Dengler himself talk about everything he experienced during the most challenging time of his life. I struggled a bit with it. I am not sure if I found him unlikable with how he was narrating, but he was speaking English really fast (especially for a non-native speaker) and reading the subtitles was also a bit of a challenge this way. Of course, only Dengler himself knew if all he said was the exact truth, but if it wasn't, then he took the secret to his grave. I hope it was sincere. You could see that he clearly liked telling about what he experienced and you could also see that he probably did not really experience any psychological issues from his captivity and flight afterwards. Good for him. By the way, early on he reminded me a bit of Bruno Ganz physically, but I lost that thought quickly and rather saw a bit of Dieter Laser in him. Maybe just me. A lot of what he tells us was really haunting enough that there was no need for Herzog to intervene or narrate himself. No matter if he was talking about the anecdote with the stolen ring (that also had the local next to him react awkwardly in an almost funny manner how he looks at the camera), no matter if he talked about his initial flight attempt, no matter if he talked about the successful flight attempt and how he lost his closest friend there who simply got decapitated out of nowhere or if he talked about how he finally got saved by another American pilot, it was all fairly fascinating to listen to. Must admit I found Dietrick, who rescued him and who we see is much older than Dengler, more likable than Dengler himself. I see he lived until way into his 90s and just died not too long ago, which is nice to see. The turkey reunion was also special in the end. I cannot deny that, even as a vegetarian.

Another scene I would like to talk about is the one relatively early on when we have Dengler there at his home and we see what it means to him to be able to open and close the door anytime he wants. This totally makes sense. Imagine you would have to live in a home that has always open doors, so everybody can enter even when you sleep. That would make you almost homeless. Or the other way around where you could not leave whenever you feel the need to. Seeing this as something special and not just a given is what you often hear from people who were held prisoner at some point, also how they like to keep doors open at work for example because they simply cannot deal with the situation of being inside a room with no visible way to get out, even if the door is not even locked. This may have seemed a bit strange at first when he kept opening and closing the door, but then it turned into one of the best segments from the movie. Still, it is Herzog in charge and you know with him the fine line between fiction and reality always becomes a bit blurry here and there and this was for example the case when we see the guys who play Dengler's captors when they reenact what happened back in the jungle. From a comment by Herzog, we knew these were the nicest fellas really and they were just playing the bad guys. They are also not credited, so it was hardly acting. They did not have to talk for example. The music is also an interesting choice here, especially the song you hear briefly before the closing credits and that was a traditional chant apparently and I thought it worked very well. It was also nice to see Dengler there in the middle of what meant the world to him, namely all these military planes and he is enjoying it so much. This was also nice closure I think and did not make you too depressed about the epilogue that they added much later because Dengler was still alive when this film got made and released, but then we see footage from Dengler's funeral in 2001, so almost five years after this film was made. Definitely a bit unusual to add something like this to an existing movie several years later. There it was also nice to see the formation up in the air from the specific aircraft models that Dengler really appreciated and how they were flying above his grave.

You can see his fascination also from the film's title. The "little" can perhaps be explained by the fact that Dengler was not a tall man in stature or also that he was really young when he was over there in Asia, even if the title and flying aspect kinda refer to his whole life. We also hear a bit about the childhood, namely how Dengler struggled hard in the years after the end of World War II in terms of starvation. The elaboration on what his mother cooked back then because it included nutritive substances was really something else and there you can see the state Germany was in at that point. A slight parallel to Herzog who also originates from the south of Germany and was also born during harsh times, even if he did not have it as hard as Dengler back then. The parallel between Dengler's starving as a child and the fat turkey in the end was quite something though. Also you can include a reference to Dengler's weight when he got rescued as he did not even weigh 50 kilos at that point I think they said. As for Herzog, he had more struggles with the post-production maybe than really with the shooting of this documentary. He was used to filming in remote areas of the planet and he was also in his mid50s already when he made this, so it was nothing new for him if you look at the places where he shot films before that. The post-production I just mentioned was an issue because there is a second version of this documentary that is considerably shorter, under 45 minutes I think and that was produced for the long-running Terra X documentary series on ZDF, a big German television station, the one in charge of showing Herzog's effort there was not happy with what he was sent to from Herzog and wrote several pages about all he considered wrong with this documentary, clearly because he was biased at that point already. There was just no way an established filmmaker like Herzog should have been approached like this, but that is another story and now we are not talking about these letters, but the full-length film we have here. One of many criticisms was for example that hunger was feature too strongly in this film, another was the music and another was that Herzog was narrating himself. I am glad that all these aspects were included here the way Herzog wanted them to be included.

I think this is pretty much it then. Finally, let me also say that at this point you can watch this documentary on Youtube if you want to and maybe as a little prologue or epilogue for yourself, you can check out the ten-minute clip of Dengler on the American show "I've Got a Secret", which I found also really nice. As I come to the end of my review, also more information on the end of Dengler's life as he was, unlike others, very happy with what Herzog did here and liked the outcome a lot. When he knew he was dying almost five years after this film, he gave Herzog explicit permission to turn his life story also into a movie with actors and there Dengler was played by Welsh actor Christian Bale, then not yet an Oscar winner and the outcome is what many consider Herzog's finest live action movie, even if with him you can never really draw a clear line there with what he does in the documentary genre as well. As you can see from my rating, I would not say this documentary we have here was a huge success or one of my big favorites from 1997, but there is also not the slightest bit of doubt for me that it gets a thumbs-up and positive recommendation. Also thanks to scenes like the one with the jellyfish. It is surely worth checking out and the running time is also not a big surprise because Herzog even made many films that ran for an hour only or even under. Go see "Little Dieter Needs to Fly".
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Absolutely disgusting
Kooozey26 January 2023
Millions of innocent men, women and children died in Indochina due to the American assault and indiscriminate bombing and shooting of civilians. Why on earth would you create some nice heart-warming fairy tale about the plight of an American pilot who probably participated in the slaughter? At the very end we see a long shot of hundreds and hundreds of American military planes with the music suggesting that what we see is somehow the most beautiful thing imaginable, proof that there is still hope in this world of ours. This may be the single most twisted, heartless and disgusting thing i have ever seen in my life. Ask one of the civilians who had to spend years (!) in caves trying to survive the onslaught about what kind of emotions that image triggers inside them. You can't ask the millions of people who are dead due to the bombs and chemicals (Agent Orange) dropped on their home country by people like "Little Dieter".
1 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Powerfully Moving Documentary
RobertF879 September 2004
This documentary film from the great film-maker Werner Herzog, tells the story of Dieter Dengler, who grew up in Germany with a passion for flight. Emigrating to the US he joins the Army in order to become a pilot, during the Vietnam War.

Dieter's incredible story is told in his own words. Most of the film involves Dieter in the various locations of his story, describing what happened to him. Dieter comes across as very likable and good-natured. With his eye for the telling detail and surreal moment, Herzog once again explores the mysteries of the world and human nature.

This is a humorous, powerful and deeply moving work and is well worth catching.
28 out of 28 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Glorious meditation on survival
Camoo17 April 2014
Little Dieter Needs to Fly ranks among the very best of Herzog's work, and though it spawned the large scale production of 'Rescue Dawn', the original stands on its own as a masterpiece of documentary filmmaking.

A highly engrossing (and frankly, incredible) story, told from the eyes of Dieter Dengler, a man who enlisted in the army during the Vietnam war so he could fulfill his childhood fantasy of flying a plane.

I won't get into the details of his story, but I will say that it is one of the single most gripping and moving accounts of survival I have ever heard, and it is made all the more powerful by Dieter's retelling and countenance. His attitude towards life is unfazed; he amazingly not only survived, but kept his wits about him, a childlike innocence and curiosity about the world still intact.

This is one of the greatest documentaries ever made.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
"Masterfully crafted Documentary, directed by Dieter Herzog or Werner Dengler"??
RoadRunnerr2 September 2006
The questions and answers of the human spirit are all here in this masterfully crafted historical documentary. The shear beauty and horror of one mans walk through life, are revealed in totality. Dieter and Herzog are combined and connected through a mental maze that has been transformed into a single straight hallway which the walls have been plastered with images created by one mans characterization of himself by the vibrations of his own vocal chords. This film, for about 80 minutes, have discovered a new dimension of storytelling. What do I call this apparently new sense. Only God knows, after all, isn't a MIRACLE something that God does for us, but chooses to remain ANONYMOUS?

This is a requirement to see. If you like to experience the lovely horror of war, this documentary will cleanse your soul to the marrow.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
a surreal documentary about a German American who needs food and flight
stephenksmith6 August 2002
Werner Herzog again explores the psyche of a man. In "Little Dieter...", we meet an effervescent, brilliant man who survived the war in Bavaria seeing starvation and strange sights, moved to the U.S. and fulfilled his dream of being a flier. War, food, death, survival, hoarding, planes, heads coming off... how one American is born. Herzog again sees madness as plane of existence and the surreal blends with the poignant as Herzog himself narratives this psychic travelogue of a German becoming an American who flies prop planes in a late 20th century war where the culmination of technology, pilgrimage and eating out of garbage cans with spoons is melded with constant optimism into a man redefined into American. As always with Herzog we are faced with florid madness, brilliance and what is man in the face of his own excesses, societal and personal. We laugh and cringe and are amazed at this man. Where else for this man but America?
7 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Herzog is a masterful storyteller!
FredCampbell21 April 2002
With documentary films, the question of realism always crops up. How much of the film is real and how much is manipulated by the film maker? In LITTLE DIETER NEEDS TO FLY, Herzog is far too absorbed in telling the story of a man telling his own story to even address the question of realism versus formalism. From the beginning, Herzog's role as storyteller is obvious. Luckily, he is a master storyteller. LITTLE DIETER is the finest, most engaging documentary I have ever seen. Dieter's story is enthralling, and Herzog's efforts at reenactment, putting Dieter through the paces of reliving his story on location while it is being filmed, are very effective. The story that Dieter tells is real, but Herzog is ever-present, wrenching absurdist commentary from the realism. This film is a must-see for any students of documentary film and/or of Werner Herzog.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Two and a Half Tall Tales from Herzog
owen-watts8 February 2024
I love Herzog the Documentarian the most but wrapping his considerable doc-chops around this particular subject was a choice. We meet the bizarre and fascinating Dieter Dengler and he explains his escape from imprisonment and torture during the Vietnam war. I'd seen both this and Rescue Dawn before so his ordeal and the unforgettable way in which he unflinchingly relives it weren't new to me, but what was was the idea that he wasn't being super truthful about everything in his life. It was an angle I'd never considered but when I twigged early on that in almost every anecdote Dengler quantified random things as "two and a half" I became addicted to darkly interpreting his harrowing story from the angle of fraud. Specificity is such a tell, and I kept distractedly wishing the film had gone there, or even mused on it.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Powerful and personal first-hand account of Dengler's experience as a POW in Laos, his escape, and how he lives with the ghosts and memories of the experience
wjlundjr16 September 2002
What attracts a man to military service? What prepares a man to survive brutal torture as a prisoner of war? What desperation leads to the planning and execution of an escape into the jungles of southeast Asia? How does he cope with the ghosts and memories he returns home with? Herzog tries to answer these questions in his documentary of Dieter Dengler, German emigre and U.S. Navy pilot shot down over Laos in 1966, who was taken prisoner, tortured and starved, but ultimately escaped to be haunted by the experience for the rest of his life. A powerful and personal first-hand account of the man, his life and experience recounted through the seemless integration of interviews, archival footage and new footage. You will never forget this story--or this man.
4 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Lovely Style
rufus197711 January 2008
Warning: Spoilers
I did not know what to expect when I decided to watch this documentary. I knew it was about an ex-Viet Nam POW in Laos who escaped, but I didn't know much else. In reality, I wasn't expecting too much. Oh what a surprise! The story of this man's life is very interesting in itself, but what sets this film apart from other biography-type docs is that Dieter himself tells most of the story himself. Dieter is very comfortable in front of the camera. His personality really shines. He tells his story about his life growing up in Germany during WWII and the hardships. We are there with him in that same small town as he describes his family, inspirations, and struggles. We follow him to America and his path to fulfilling his dream to be a pilot. Then later Dieter describes his story of capture, escape, and survival in the Laotian jungle. We are again with him in that very jungle as he describes and re-enacts his imprisonment and path to freedom with great detail. We see the same primitive huts, villagers, and forms of detainment he dealt with that really hasn't changed for 30 years. We see the thick jungle, mountain terrain, and rivers Dieter faced during his escape. It helps us to understand his emotions, pain, and plight. I enjoyed the man, the story, and the style. Job well done!
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Little Herzog Needs to Fly....Nice.
Sinnerman28 December 2003
After I finished watching this intriguing documentary, I wondered; how much of Little Dieter was in Herzog, and vice versa? For Werner Herzog(and Dieter likewise) seemed capable of evoking a whole spectrum of human emotions in his works, however idiosyncratic they looked on the surface.

In this story of an American immigrant from Germany, who piloted a plane in Nam, got shot down, interned, escaped and survived, we got to see how the man lived, before, during and after this arduous period of ordeal. All that insurmountable pain and uphill battles might not have fazed the man, but it certainly took its toll. Memories of these experiences continue to haunt his being. Case in point, due in part to enduring that period of torture and starvation, the man now stocked his cellar with lotsa food in case he's ever locked in....

Could the above have been a reason why Herzog chose to film this man? A man seemingly steeped in personality dysfunctions but was in fact merely a wounded man living his life, the only way he knew how? Could it be that Dieter's story also somehow mirrored Herzog's life and outlook? Damned if I am to know the answers to these universal mysteries...

Much had been said about the questionable sanity of Werner Herzog. But during my intensive devouring of his films over this last week, I began to see a pattern unravelling. This man had many profound insights to share with us all about humanity. And they often transcended intellectual boundaries. Through those intangibly twisted tales he weaved, he conveyed his ideas to us all lucidly, impactfully. And he did them all without ever gauzing the profusion in his bleeding heart. This man was never afraid of showing his earnest emotions nor was he afraid of breaking cinematic conventions. If one cared enough to be touched by the man, he or she will do so without safety nets. I did. Nice.

Yes, its no longer fashionable in these times of impenetrable cynicism to embrace a man like Werner Herzog. But I am fascinated by this psycho visionary nonetheless. And I will follow the man to the very pits of wherever he's heading. As long as its somewhere I'm willing to go, that is....heh.
15 out of 21 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Werner Herzog shows how a determined person is able to fulfill his dreams of flying.
FilmCriticLalitRao7 October 2014
Although German American pilot Dieter Dengler claims that he is not a hero, his triumphs over tough odds paint a different picture of a man who has vivid memories of his valiant escape during Vietnam war. Director Werner Herzog presents his film with a dual approach in which facts about Germany are also presented in order to depict a small segment of Dieter Dengler's past life. Accurate and detailed description of a war is something a viewer can cherish from this film. For this purpose, Werner Herzog accompanies Dieter Dengler to the places which were part of his harrowing ordeal. It is true that much has been written about "American dream" and its effects on American people. However, Werner Herzog is one of the few acclaimed directors who has shown the real success of an American dream in a film. What makes this film different as well as unique is its depiction of a foreigner making it big in life through his realization of an "American dream". Lastly, love and passion which many people in the world feel for an "American dream" is something which can be influenced by this film.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Another superbly poignant Herzog piece
mstomaso15 January 2007
Although perhaps not as entertaining as some of Herzog's work, Little Dieter is another fine film by one of the world's greatest film artists. Departing from Herzog's usual themes, Little Dieter is a fascinating and uplifting character study about a brave man and his efforts to go on living after a life-alteringly traumatic experience.

Dieter Dengler wanted to fly from a very young age, and the Viet Nam war gave him that opportunity, but instead of spending the war soaring in a cockpit, he spent most of it grounded as a POW. Dieter tells most of his story eloquently and passionately, with occasional help from Herzog. Herzog does very little voice over this time, but contributes a lot of subtly powerful soundscaping and visuals - which should be no surprise to those familiar with him.

Dengler is a fascinating and extremely likable person. As human and as alive as they come, I found the story of his life and his incorrigibly upbeat personality to be inspiring. Thanks to Herzog for (re)introducing him to us.

The scale of the film is not as sprawling, and the drama is not as fierce as many of the early films that made Herzog a force to be reckoned with. Nevertheless, I strongly recommend this to his fans and to those who enjoy documentaries. It's a very interesting and well executed film.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An error has occured. Please try again.

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed