“Bruno S. is one of the cinema’s great holy innocents”
—Richard Brody
“Terrifically, spontaneously funny and, just as spontaneously, full of unexpected pathos…Herzog visually dazzles us while he’s pulling the rug from under our feet.”
—The New York Times
In one of Werner Herzog’s most complex and captivating films, we follow Stroszek (the immortal Bruno S.) from his German prison cell to a baffling and absurd new life in Wisconsin.