Leni Riefenstahl - Trionfo della volontà (Triumph of the Will)

Triumph of the Will

Genre : Documentary, War

Questione: 28/03/2006
Produttore: Leni Riefenstahl
Scrittore: Leni Riefenstahl, Walter Ruttmann
Studio: Synapse Films
Durata: 120
Paese: Germania
Lingue: German, English, Spanish, Italian
Lingua: En
Sottotitoli: Inglese
Dischi: 1
Media: Lettore DVD
Tratti somatici: Black and White, Special Edition
Formato video : NTSC
Suono: Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono
Regione: 1
IMdB : 0025913
UPC: 0654930305294
Cast: Adolf Hitler, Hermann Goering, Rudolf Hess, Werner von Blomberg, Werner von Fritsch
Tag: Hitler, Rally, Nazi, Propaganda, Third Reich, Nuremberg Germany, Nazi Party, Propaganda Film, Totalitarian State, Procession, Montage, Salute, Nazi Flag, Military, Public Domain, Swastika, Eagle, Cloud, Lebensraum, Military Official, Banner, Heil Hitler, Title Directed By Female, Wehrmacht, Controversy, Spade, Hitlerjugend, Night, Speech, Motorcycle, Torch, Labor, Shovel, Bathing, Parade, Government Official, Flag, Nazi Uniform, Camping, Year 1935, Nazism, Motorcade, Nazi Propaganda, Nazi Rally, Nazi Germany

Sommario: Leni Riefenstahl directed this chilling documentary of the sixth Nazi Party Congress in 1934. This intense digitally remastered presentation details how the Nazi party developed strong propaganda and attempted to sell their ideas to German leaders. 1936/b&w/107 min/NR.
Leni Riefenstahl - Trionfo della volontà (Triumph of the Will)
Triumph of the Will is one of the most important films ever made. Not because it documents evil–more watchable examples are being made today. And not as a historical example of blind propaganda–those (much shorter) movies are merely laughable now. No, Riefenstahl’s masterpiece–and it is a masterpiece, politics aside–combines the strengths of documentary and propaganda into a single, overwhelmingly powerful visual force. Riefenstahl was hired by the Reich to create an eternal record of the 1934 rally at Nuremberg, and that’s exactly what she does. You might not become a Nazi after watching her film, but you will understand too clearly how Germany fell under Hitler’s spell. The early crowd scenes remind one of nothing so much as Beatles concert footage (if only their fans were so well behaved!). Like the fascists it monumentalizes, Triumph of the Will overlooks its own weaknesses–at nearly two hours, the speeches tend to drone on, and the repeated visual motifs are a little over-hypnotic, especially for modern viewers. But the occasional iconic vista (banners lining the streets of Nuremberg, Hitler parting a sea of 200,000 party members standing at attention) will electrify anyone into wakefulness. –Grant Balfour

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