
Werner Herzog's latest effort is one more in a line of well-crafted documentaries. For this one he and co-producer Dmitry Vasykov travel to the remote Siberian wilderness, and the village of Bakhta, to understand how its people survive the almost prehistorically harsh conditions.

The story opens in the spring, when the trappers are still digging out from under the winter's snows. We see how ingenious traps, boats, skis, and other tools are made with nothing but an axe. As the year progresses through the mosquito-laden summer and into the following fall and winter, we live through a vivid, raw, and un-retouched experience with some amazingly courageous people.




Roger Ebert called Herzog's voice a "tonic for the soul." Quite so. His accented cadence is almost hypnotic, suitable to the rhythm of the nature he often depicts. The experience of listening to his voice is as powerful as what he describes. You can hear a bit of what I mean by listening to the opening lines of the trailer:
This film is a tonic in more than one way—in contrast to one's own "problems," which will not seem as large after viewing—and as a way of understanding some of the primal, communal drives of the human psyche.
Like going back in time, Happy People takes us into the realm of elemental survival and the astonishing freedom that close connection to nature brings.