oldhollywood:

via Land of Silence and Darkness (1971, dir. Werner Herzog)
Q. Whenever I have presented this film to audiences, it has always made a tremendous impact. Why do you think the film strikes such a chord?
Werner Herzog: People generally respond so positively to it because it is a film about  solitude, about the terrifying difficulties of being understood by  others, something we have to deal with every single day of our lives. In  the film one finds the most radical and absolute human dignity, human  suffering stripped bare.
Land of Silence & Darkness is a film particularly close to  my heart. If I had not made it there would be a great gap in my  existence. Fini Straubinger, a 56-year-old deaf and blind woman,  caused me to think about loneliness to an extent that I never had  before.
In her case, loneliness is taken to unimaginable limits, and I  have the distinct impression that anyone seeing the film asks, ‘Good  God, what would be left of my life if I were blind and deaf? How could I  live, overcome loneliness make myself understood?’ And the question of  how we learn concepts, learn languages, learn communication is also  there.
Q. Why did you want to include the children who had been born deaf and blind?
Herzog: I thought it was important to show a different side to the story. Fini went deaf and blind when she was a teen, which clearly makes a difference in the kind of contact she had with the outside world. We will never know what these other kids think about the world about them, for there is just no way to communicate with them, and contact rarely surpasses the very basic palpable essentials: ‘This is a book. This is heat. Do you need food?’
[Helen Keller], who was born deaf and blind and actually studied philosophy raises many questions about what these children think and feel about abstract concepts, to say nothing of innate human emotions.
It seems certain they do feel and understand emotions like anger and  fear just like anyone else, but it is not possible for us to know how  these children cope with the anonymous fears that are within and that  can never be explained by the outside world. The children we filmed  would have moments of deep fear that seemed to relate only to what was  happening inside their own heads, which when you think about it is quite  startling.
-2002, excerpted from Herzog on Herzog. In the above still, Fini Straubinger demonstrates how she communicates using a tactile language tapped out on the hand.

oldhollywood:

via Land of Silence and Darkness (1971, dir. Werner Herzog)

Q. Whenever I have presented this film to audiences, it has always made a tremendous impact. Why do you think the film strikes such a chord?

Werner Herzog: People generally respond so positively to it because it is a film about solitude, about the terrifying difficulties of being understood by others, something we have to deal with every single day of our lives. In the film one finds the most radical and absolute human dignity, human suffering stripped bare.

Land of Silence & Darkness is a film particularly close to my heart. If I had not made it there would be a great gap in my existence. Fini Straubinger, a 56-year-old deaf and blind woman, caused me to think about loneliness to an extent that I never had before.

In her case, loneliness is taken to unimaginable limits, and I have the distinct impression that anyone seeing the film asks, ‘Good God, what would be left of my life if I were blind and deaf? How could I live, overcome loneliness make myself understood?’ And the question of how we learn concepts, learn languages, learn communication is also there.

Q. Why did you want to include the children who had been born deaf and blind?

Herzog: I thought it was important to show a different side to the story. Fini went deaf and blind when she was a teen, which clearly makes a difference in the kind of contact she had with the outside world. We will never know what these other kids think about the world about them, for there is just no way to communicate with them, and contact rarely surpasses the very basic palpable essentials: ‘This is a book. This is heat. Do you need food?’

[Helen Keller], who was born deaf and blind and actually studied philosophy raises many questions about what these children think and feel about abstract concepts, to say nothing of innate human emotions.

It seems certain they do feel and understand emotions like anger and fear just like anyone else, but it is not possible for us to know how these children cope with the anonymous fears that are within and that can never be explained by the outside world. The children we filmed would have moments of deep fear that seemed to relate only to what was happening inside their own heads, which when you think about it is quite startling.

-2002, excerpted from Herzog on Herzog. In the above still, Fini Straubinger demonstrates how she communicates using a tactile language tapped out on the hand.