Disecciona el Tercer Reich con una hoja analítica, trazando el improbable ascenso de Hitler, su dominio de la psicología de masas y su consumada habilidad para explotar las debilidades de lo... Leer todoDisecciona el Tercer Reich con una hoja analítica, trazando el improbable ascenso de Hitler, su dominio de la psicología de masas y su consumada habilidad para explotar las debilidades de los demás.Disecciona el Tercer Reich con una hoja analítica, trazando el improbable ascenso de Hitler, su dominio de la psicología de masas y su consumada habilidad para explotar las debilidades de los demás.
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- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
It's probably still the most abundant treasure chest of film and image about the dictator available. We have no talking experts and none of the glossy, samey feel of Netflix documentaries. It's German made and narrated by a Brit - so Hitler is, of course, savaged, often with sardonic wit. The tone is hypnotic.
The biggest sense it covneys is of Hitler as both director of theater and actor on a stage he prepares. In a few marvelous, and previously unseen by me footage, we see not just the vitriolic exposition up on stage - but also the nervous preparation, the uncertainty of the early days. And when deprived of the spotlight, having to sit with others as a more ordinary mortal (such as at Berghof), morose, taciturn, uninteresting.
FDR was a huge contrast. Similarly magnetic when he wanted to, inspiring on a stage, but happier outside of it, gregarious with company and loved a good gossip. He did entertain his own coterie like Hitler, but his home was vivacious, open-hearted.
It paints a good picture of early Hitler in Vienna growing quietly resentful at being ordinary. In a Travis Bickle or Lee Oswald kind of way.
The need was always for a grandiose stage and adulation from a crowd. In later days, confused by unexpected successes (invading through the Ardennes), he thought he was also a strategic genius, to disastrous results for everyone.
His bitterest legacy, the Holocaust, is included near the end, with harrowing footage. WWII footage will be more familiar from other places, by comparison to the early days. And how fitting that post Stalingrad at the latest, there are no more foootage of speeches and crowds and only the well known Hitler who looks shaken and glum.
There are so many riches here; we don't just see Hitler driving triumphant into Vienna for the Anschluss, we also see the speech before an endless crowd welcoming his home country Austria into the empire. Footage from the Blitz we have seen countless times; but I've never before seen footage of German parades in the closing stages of the war, trying to recapture the fervor of early Nazi days but looking ramshackle and foolish amid ruins of a half-destroyed city.
So this is essential viewing to this day, more so for the prewar coverage. WWII changed everything in ways we still do not fully grasp - our world was sped up by maybe 100 years I think. We are picking its lessons apart at our peril. One of the best I've seen.
But this was made in 1977 and it's 150 minutes of archival footage about hitler and his germany. No talking heads though there is of course a narrator to describe what we are looking at. Many many scenes of Hitler giving actual speeches. He speaks in german but there are subtitles. It's really cool to watch and hear this outrageous figure from the past.
My father was in WWII and because he was almost 46 when I was born I never really became mature enough to talk to him about the whole thing as an adult. Now I wish I could, but of course it's too late. So I read and watch what I can to learn of this unthinkable period in which evil came close to being dominant in our world. If a person unfit to have a real job or raise a family could fool a great country into leading it off a cliff how can the power of evil be underestimated? I've read that over 50 million deaths were directly related to Hitler's actions and subsequent World War. If we are not to repeat the mistakes of the past we must learn from it. I find this a good learning tool. A glimpse into one of the most evil men who ever ruled a people. I'm sorry to say "one of the most" as we still have evil rising to great heights today. We must not forget as civilized God fearing people we still have a mandate to fight that evil.
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- Citas
Narrator of English version: Any man who put his trust in Hitler, could count on his protection. The frightened middle classes, the working man, or the unemployed. His energetic platitudes were directed at everybody.
- ConexionesFeatures Triumph des Willens (1935)
Selecciones populares
- How long is Hitler: A Career?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución2 horas 30 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1