Herzog’s film school memories of a local family who took him in.
I loved the Franklins. With them, I got to know some of the best and deepest things about America. Later on, I invited them to Munich and took them to a party in Sachrang, the remote Bavarian village where I grew up. Hugs, beer, squeals. Contact became harder as much of the family, Billy included, seemed to fall further into religion. When I played the villain in a 2012 Hollywood action movie–it was called “Jack Reacher,” and the star, Tom Cruise, wanted me–the filming took place in Pittsburgh. But I couldn’t find the Franklins. I drove out to Fox Chapel. Almost everything in the area had changed; there were new buildings everywhere; it was depressing. The Franklins’ home was mostly unchanged; the lawn had the same old broad-leaved trees, but the path down to the garage was overgrown with flowering shrubs. There was no one home. I tried the neighbors, and learned that the house had changed owners several times. I knew that Evelyn Franklin had died. Two years later, I heard that Billy had died, too. He had been like a brother to me.
Herzog, Werner. (2023, August 21). The Mysteries of Pittsburgh. The New Yorker, 5–12. Retrieved from [https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023/08/28/the-mysteries-of-pittsburgh]
The best part of Werner Herzog is that you never know where he’ll appear – Mexico, Jack Reacher, The Mandalorian, Pittsburgh?