Werner Herzog to Receive Venice Film Festival’s Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement
Werner Herzog COURTESY OF LENA HERZOG
“I am not done yet,” the legendary filmmaker promises as he continues his tireless pursuit of cinematic truth.
Werner Herzog, one of the most singular and uncompromising voices in world cinema, will be honored with the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement at the 82nd Venice International Film Festival, set to run from August 27 through September 6, 2025. The accolade celebrates a body of work that defies easy categorization—equal parts mythic, metaphysical, and mercilessly physical—and affirms Herzog’s enduring impact on the language of film.
In a characteristically humble yet defiant statement, Herzog responded to the honor:
“I feel deeply honored to receive a Lifetime Achievement Honorary Golden Lion by the Venice Biennale. I have always tried to be a Good Soldier of Cinema, and this feels like a medal for my work: Thank you. ”
But true to his restless spirit, Herzog made one thing clear: this is not a farewell.
“However, I have not gone into retirement. I work as always. A few weeks ago, I just finished a documentary in Africa, Ghost Elephants, and at this moment, I am shooting my next feature film, Bucking Fastard, in Ireland. I am developing an animated film, based on my novel, The Twilight World, and I am acting the voice of a creature in Bong Joon Ho’s upcoming animated film. I am not done yet.”
A Soldier of Cinema
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From Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972) to Fitzcarraldo (1982), from Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979) to Grizzly Man(2005), Herzog’s career is a catalogue of obsession, extremity, and poetic delirium. His collaborations with Klaus Kinski—some of the most volatile in film history—produced works of hallucinatory grandeur and madness. His documentaries, too, are far from passive observation; they are existential inquiries into the sublime and the absurd, with Herzog’s unmistakable voice both narrating and haunting the images onscreen.
What unites Herzog’s fiction and nonfiction is not genre or style, but a devotion to what he calls “ecstatic truth”—a mode of cinema that transcends the real in order to reach something spiritually and emotionally truer than fact.
Venice’s Tribute to a Romantic Provocateur
Venice Artistic Director Alberto Barbera praised Herzog as a “physical filmmaker and indefatigable hiker” who “constantly crosses the planet Earth pursuing hitherto unseen images.” He likened Herzog to “the last heir of the great tradition of German Romanticism,” describing his cinema as “both fascinating and hazardous because it involves total commitment and putting oneself on the line to the point of physical risk, where catastrophe constantly lurks.”
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Herzog, Barbera continued, “has never ceased from testing the limits of the film language, belying the traditional distinction between documentary and fiction, and at the same time proposing a radical investigation of the topics of communication, the relationship between images and music, and of the infinite beauty of nature and its inevitable corruption.”
Not a Swan Song, But a Signal Flare
The Golden Lion is, of course, an emblem of career culmination—but in Herzog’s case, it is also a provocation. At 82, he remains creatively active, intellectually defiant, and physically unrelenting. Ghost Elephants, shot recently in Africa, is only his latest plunge into uncharted terrain. His upcoming narrative feature, Bucking Fastard, currently filming in Ireland, promises to once again blur the lines between satire, tragedy, and metaphysical inquiry. Meanwhile, his foray into animation—adapting The Twilight World, a novel based on the true story of a Japanese soldier who refused to believe World War II had ended—hints at Herzog’s willingness to reinvent even at this late stage of his career.
And as if to reaffirm his status as a cult icon across generations, Herzog will lend his voice to a character in Bong Joon Ho’s anticipated animated feature.
A Life at the Edge
The Venice Film Festival’s decision to honor Herzog isn’t merely about longevity. It’s about legacy. His films are not only widely influential—they are also endlessly mysterious, alive with contradictions, and immune to imitation. Werner Herzog has never made cinema to please, to comfort, or to conform. He makes cinema to provoke, to disturb, and to reach toward that which cannot be named.
To honor him is to recognize a filmmaker who has never once flinched at the abyss—but instead, invited us all to look with him.
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