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IMDbPro

From One Second to the Next

  • 2013
  • Not Rated
  • 34m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
From One Second to the Next (2013)
DocumentaryShort

Stories of serious traffic accidents caused by texting and driving are told by the perpetrators and surviving victims.Stories of serious traffic accidents caused by texting and driving are told by the perpetrators and surviving victims.Stories of serious traffic accidents caused by texting and driving are told by the perpetrators and surviving victims.

  • Director
    • Werner Herzog
  • Stars
    • Valetta Bradford
    • Xzavier Davis-Bilbo
    • Aurie Parris
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    1.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Werner Herzog
    • Stars
      • Valetta Bradford
      • Xzavier Davis-Bilbo
      • Aurie Parris
    • 10User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos6

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    Valetta Bradford
    • Self - Xzavier's Mother
    • (as Valetta)
    Xzavier Davis-Bilbo
    • Self - Accident Victim
    Aurie Parris
    • Self - Xzavier's Sister
    • (as Aurie)
    Chandler Gerber
    • Self - Driver
    Diosdado Hernandez
    • Self - Lead Crash Investigator
    Debbie Drewniak
    • Self - Accident Victim
    Elizabeth Brigante
    • Self - Debbie's Sister
    Karl
    • Self - Debbie's Brother
    Megan O'Dell
    • Self - Daughter of Accident Victim
    Reggie Shaw
    • Self - Driver
    John R. Kaiserman
    • Self - Accident Victim
    Chad Vernon
    • Self - Police Officer
    • Director
      • Werner Herzog
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    7.31.3K
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    Featured reviews

    5celr

    Why was this film made?

    This relatively short film is about the consequences of texting and driving and a warning for viewers to not to do it. Herzog has considerable skill in interviewing and assembling the interviews in order to make a point or create a narrative. We can see his artistry here, but we're left wondering: what is it all about, really? Both victims and perpetrators of texting and driving accidents are interviewed. Of course it's what you'd expect: descriptions of the carnage, devastated families and offenders who have to live with guilt for the rest of their lives. These are the kind of scenes that are played out in any fatal accident, no matter what the cause. And except for the particular reason for driver distraction, in this case texting, they are generic to all bad accidents. This exercise in persuasion is powerful, moving, and pointless. Why? Because anyone dumb enough to text and drive wouldn't be watching a Werner Herzog film to get pointers on driver ed. Telling a person not to text and drive is like telling him not to stick his hand in a wood chipper while it's running. You don't warn people like that about the dangers of doing something anyone with half a brain would know from the start not to do, you don't let them drive in the first place.
    9Mario64

    Very Moving Documentary Short

    "From One Second to the Next", by the renowned documentarian Werner Herzog, is a powerful short on the most tragic consequences resulting in people texting while driving. Herzog takes the subject that while serious may appear too general or simplistic a topic, and makes it a really personal, moving experience, showing both side of several very sad incidents. The interviews of both loved ones of victims, and of those whose texting caused tragedies (those who were willing to speak) are very powerful and moving.

    Beyond all this is a dire warning to anyone who has this reckless habit to get away with it right away, and those haven't garnered it to make sure they don't start. No words which you can wait to say later—it can only take one word, an abbreviation of a few letters—can ever be worth the needless taking of a human life.
    10The_Mob_Has_Spoken

    Here's my theory.

    This is an excellent short form documentary. Werner Herzog is a bit of a character and you never know what his movies are all different* so I always try to catch his stuff. But what I really want to know is why he made this one. My theory is that Herzog got caught in California text messaging while driving a couple times and the judge made him do a movie about it instead of community service. If anybody knows, please PM me.

    9/10

    *Herzog makes documentaries, feature films, and even acts in other people's movies.
    6Theo Robertson

    Upsetting And Disgraceful In Equal Measure

    I don't know if I'm getting old or I'm getting self righteous when I say I've never really found the appeal of having cell phone/mobile phone . I've got one but is rarely used to send calls only to receive them . Since I only have a cheap one that cost 10 pounds sterling it's difficult to send text on it and have never learned to send text . Astonishing I know but no big deal , and yet some people seem to exist only to receive and send text messages . Has anyone here walked through the busy concourse of an airport and had to dodge numerous idiots with their ugly faces buried in their mobile as they type a text message . If they had brains they'd be dangerous . If they had a car they'd would be potential killers and this documentary by Werner Herzog shows why

    FROM ONE SECOND TO THE NEXT isn't perhaps a fitting title because my reading of the title suggests that it may mean it only takes a second of carelessness of texting to cause irredeemable carnage and lifelong grief to a stranger who has done you no harm and who you didn't know even existed till you ran in to them . Perhaps the title can also mean that the whole universe has changed - and not for the better - for someone within that second ? It's a rather ambiguous title and one that doesn't work very well

    Judging a documentary by its title is like judging a book by its cover and its content that is of paramount importance . In this case Herzog grabs you right from the start . We're shown a black mother of a child who is the victim and a driver who hit her son while texting . She explains her high hopes for her son who was going to excel at sport but that dream is now over . . There is a knock on the door and she exclaims her son is back from school and you can may be second guess as to what will be revealed next . Sure enough her son's helper has brought him back from school - by pushing his wheelchair . The documentary continues along the same lines . The much loved sister who has been left brain damaged by a texting driver , the blacksmith who has had to give up the job he loved after having vertebrae broken by a texting driver and the daughter who was about to be married and lost her father to a texting driver just before the wedding

    So far so sad and just in case you aren't moved by these stories of real life tragedy depressing music is played on the soundtrack ( Not sure if I've picked Bob up wrong as to " fake music " but the copy I saw did have a musical track ) and all this is very hard hitting and the emotional equivalent of getting kicked in the teeth . . Strange then that Herzog feels the need to include the stories of two drivers who have killed people while texting . Before you say I'll say it " That's because he's showing the trauma caused to people who have instigated a tragic accident . There lives have been ruined and will have to carry the guilt for the rest of their life " I doubt if that's the point of their inclusion however . What Herzog is doing deliberately or accidentally is making a film about redemption and forgiveness . One instigator of a fatal text driving incident that killed three children from the Amish community receives a letter from the bereaved father telling him that God is watching over him while another fatal instigator is met by the daughter of a man he killed . I'm afraid that if you kill someone it is forever and the more likely response is life long hatred from the families of people you killed especially if it's down to something as stupid as texting while driving which is no different from getting drunk and driving a car . Would we feel sympathy for drunk drivers involved in fatal crashes ? . Of course not and I guess this might be the reason why it hasn't been nominated for an Oscar in the short documentary category
    hkauteur

    HK Auteur Review - From One Second to the Next

    The moment I read about this new documentary short from Werner Herzog, I thought, "A public service announcement video to warn people to never text while driving? Really?" It seems like a small hair ball of a problem that should already be common sense. Having watched the short, I realized that's precisely the problem, that texting while driving seems like a such a minor hiccup. It is not.

    The half-hour short covers the story of four accidents that have caused by texting while driving. One case has a child that is paralyzed for life and is currently on life support, caused by an accident from a teenage girl who was distracted from texting. There were no skid marks. She never saw him. Another case involves a man who killed two Amish children. The driver is now perpetually left to questioning himself what was so important about his text that couldn't wait. The other two cases was a family dealing with the monstrous medical bills from her mother's accident and a family losing her father. What really struck me was the last man who caused the accident, who wasn't able to recall the text message he sent after the accident happened. He couldn't remember why it was important.

    Herzog brings his brand of deep introspectiveness to the short, adding the much-needed seriousness this topic deserves. As the title suggests, life is connected by each second. It's in- between each seconds we must throw caution, because everything can change within a second. The most disturbing part for me was, my initial reaction was exactly the type of behavior this short was trying to warn against. It is not a hairball. It is not something to handle. Reading a text is not better than sending a text. There are human lives at stake. Do not text and drive. You just do not do it.

    Some statistics I found on texting while driving:

    • Texting while driving causes 1,600,000 accidents per year.


    • The minimal amount of time needed for a text is 5 seconds. If you are traveling at 88.5 km/hour (55 miles/hour), that would cover an entire football field without any attention paid to the road.


    • As of 2011, at least 23% auto collisions have involved cell phones. That amounts to 1.3 million car crashes.


    • 1 out of 5 drivers of all ages confess to surfing on the web while driving.


    • Text messaging is the longest eye-off-the-road time out of all the distracted driving activities. An accident is 23 times more likely to happen if you are text messaging.


    The documentary can be viewed on Youtube. The slogan to the AT&T campaign is "It can wait."

    For more reviews, please visit my film blog at http://hkauteur.wordpress.com/

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 7, 2013 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • YouTube
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • От одной секунды до следующей
    • Filming locations
      • Bluffton, Indiana, USA(Interview)
    • Production companies
      • AT&T
      • Verizon Communications
      • Sprint Mobile TV
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 34m
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 16:9 HD

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