![](https://jer-cin.org.il/sites/default/files/styles/height_100/public/documentary_forum_logo.png?itok=Q-x_AGo8)
![](https://jer-cin.org.il/sites/default/files/styles/height_100/public/takriv_logo.png?itok=AHLMLY73)
![](https://jer-cin.org.il/sites/default/files/styles/height_100/public/goethe_logo_horizontal_green_srgb.jpg?itok=8RZwiFp0)
The prehistoric Chauvet Cave in Ardèche in southern France, where 32,000-years-old wall paintings were preserved—the oldest paintings known to man. The 3D glasses allow us to experience, along with Herzog, the wonderful and rare sights, the “forgotten dreams” that were frozen in the belly of the earth for millennia. (3D screening)
The prehistoric Chauvet Cave in Ardèche in southern France, where 32,000-years-old wall paintings were preserved—the oldest paintings known to man. The 3D glasses allow us to experience, along with Herzog, the wonderful and rare sights, the “forgotten dreams” that were frozen in the belly of the earth for millennia. (3D screening)
Every summer, Timothy Treadwell would venture into the grizzly bear sanctuary in Alaska to live with and protect the bears, documenting his every day with honesty, idealism, and naivety. He died in a bear attack in 2003. Herzog revisits Treadwell's footage to present one of the best documentaries ever made.