Script-Writing Raees (film) for the dept of English
Always remember that you are absolutely unique. Just like
everyone else. Margaret Mead “No self knows what it will earn tomorrow and no self knows in
what land it will die.” (W31:33;
H31:34)
Plot
Raees, from Fatehpur, Gujarat gets
involved in illegal liquor trade at a very young age. Along with Sadiq, Raees
works for a notorious gangster Jairaj, smuggles alcohol illegally by bribing
the police. Though he is a smuggler, he lives by the philosophy, as taught by
his mother that every occupation is good, and no religion is greater than any
occupation till it does not cause any harm to anyone. He decides to part ways
with Jairaj and start operating on his own. He meets Musabhai and Nawab in
Mumbai, and with their help he starts his bootlegging business. Meanwhile, an
honest police offer of the IPS cadre,
J. A. Majmudar, wants to end this illegal liquor trade.
Exercise: Pick connotative words or lines
those have only negative associations so to cast Pakistan in a negative light.
Pick sentences laced with sarcasm, and identify the use of
irony to mock or convey contempt for the things Islam stands for.
Writing: Rewrite plot and dialogue so to counter
propaganda of a movie.
Hint: Occupation is to be
dictated by Islam.
Things are non-permissible because they are pernicious.
Triumph of the Will (German: Triumph
des Willens) is a 1935 German propaganda film directed, produced, edited, and co-written
by Leni Riefenstahl. It chronicles the 1934 Nazi Party Congress in Nuremberg, which was attended by more than
700,000 Nazi supporters.[1]The film contains excerpts from
speeches given by Nazi
leaders at the
Congress, including Adolf Hitler, Rudolf Hess and Julius Streicher, interspersed with footage of
massed Sturmabteilung (SA) and Schutzstaffel (SS) troops and public reaction. Hitler
commissioned the film and served as an unofficial executive producer;
his name appears in the opening titles. The film's overriding theme is the
return of Germany as a great power, with Hitler as the leader who
will bring glory to the nation. Because the film was made after the 1934 Night of the Long
Knives (on 30
June) many prominent Sturmabteilung (SA) members are absent—they were murdered
in that Party purge, organised and orchestrated by Hitler to replace the SA
with the Schutzstaffel (SS) as his main paramilitary force.
Triumph of the Will was
released in 1935 and became a prominent example of propaganda in film history.
Riefenstahl's techniques—such as moving cameras, aerial photography,
the use of long focus lenses to create a distorted perspective,
and the revolutionary approach to the use of music and cinematography—have earned Triumph of the Will recognition as one of the greatest
propaganda films in history. Riefenstahl helped to stage the scenes,
directing and rehearsing some of them at least fifty times. Riefenstahl won
several awards, not only in Germany but also in the United States, France,
Sweden and other countries. The film was popular in the Third Reich, and has continued to influence
films, documentaries and commercials to this day.[2] In Germany, the film is not censored but
the courts commonly classify it as Nazi propaganda which requires an
educational context to public screenings.[3]
An earlier film by Riefenstahl—The Victory of Faith (Der Sieg des Glaubens)—showed
Hitler and SA leader Ernst Röhm together at the 1933 Nazi party congress.
After Röhm's murder, the party attempted the destruction of all copies, leaving
only one known to have survived in Britain. The direction and sequencing of
images is almost the same as that Riefenstahl used in Triumph of the Will a year later.
Frank Capra's
seven-film series Why We Fight is said to have been directly inspired by, and the United States' response to, Triumph of the Will.[4]
Synopsis[edit]
The film begins with a prologue, the only commentary in the
film. It consists of the following text, shown sequentially, against a grey
background:
Am 5. September 1934
[On 5 September 1934]
|
20 Jahre nach dem Ausbruch
des Weltkrieges
[20 years after the outbreak
of the World War]
|
16 Jahre nach dem Anfang
deutschen Leidens
[16 years after the beginning of German
suffering]
|
19 Monate nach dem Beginn der
deutschen Wiedergeburt
[19 months after the beginning of the German rebirth]
|
flog Adolf Hitler wiederum
nach Nürnberg, um Heerschau abzuhalten über seine Getreuen
[Adolf Hitler flew again to
Nuremberg to review the columns of his faithful followers]
|
Day 1: The film opens with shots of the clouds above the city, and
then moves through the clouds to float above the assembling masses below, with
the intention of portraying beauty and majesty of the scene. The cruciform
shadow of Hitler's plane is visible as it passes over the tiny figures marching
below, accompanied by an orchestral arrangement of the Horst-Wessel-Lied. Upon arriving at the Nuremberg
airport, Hitler and other Nazi leaders emerge from his plane to thunderous
applause and a cheering crowd. He is then driven into Nuremberg, through
equally enthusiastic people, to his hotel where a night rally is later held.
Day 2: The second day begins with images of Nuremberg at dawn,
accompanied by an extract from the Act III Prelude (Wach Auf!) of Richard Wagner's Die
Meistersinger von Nürnberg. Following this is a montage of
the attendees preparing for the opening of the Reich Party Congress, and
footage of the top Nazi officials arriving at the Luitpold Arena.
The film then cuts to the opening ceremony, where Rudolf Hess announces
the start of the Congress. The camera then introduces much of the Nazi
hierarchy and covers their opening speeches, including Joseph Goebbels, Alfred Rosenberg, Hans Frank, Fritz Todt, Robert Ley and Julius Streicher. Then the film cuts to an outdoor
rally for the Reichsarbeitsdienst (Labor Service), which is primarily a
series of quasi-military drills by men carrying spades. This is also where
Hitler gives his first speech on the merits of the Labour Service and praising
them for their work in rebuilding Germany. The day then ends with a torchlight SA parade
in which Viktor Lutze speaks
to the crowds.
Day 3: The third day starts with a Hitler Youth rally
on the parade ground. Again the camera covers the Nazi dignitaries arriving and
the introduction of Hitler by Baldur von Schirach.
Hitler then addresses the Youth, describing in militaristic terms
how they must harden themselves and prepare for sacrifice. Everyone present,
including General Werner von Blomberg,
then assemble for a military pass and review, featuring Wehrmacht cavalry
and various armored vehicles. That night Hitler delivers another speech to
low-ranking party officials by torchlight, commemorating the first year since
the Nazis took power and declaring that the party and state are one entity.
Day 4: The fourth day is the climax of the film, where the most memorable
of the imagery is presented. Hitler, flanked by Heinrich Himmler and
Viktor Lutze, walks through a long wide expanse with over 150,000 SA and SS troops
standing at attention, to lay a wreath at a First World War memorial. Hitler
then reviews the parading SA and SS men, following which Hitler and Lutze
deliver a speech where they discuss the Night of the Long Knives purge of the SA several months prior.
Lutze reaffirms the SA's loyalty to the regime, and Hitler absolves the SA of
any crimes committed by Ernst Röhm. New party flags are consecrated by letting
them touch the Blutfahne (the
same cloth flag said to have been carried by the fallen Nazis during the Beer Hall Putsch) and, following a final parade in
front of the Nuremberg Frauenkirche,
Hitler delivers his closing speech. In it he reaffirms the primacy of the Nazi
Party in Germany, declaring, "All loyal Germans will become National
Socialists. Only the best National Socialists are party comrades!" Hess
then leads the assembled crowd in a final Sieg Heil salute
for Hitler, marking the close of the party congress. The entire crowd sings the Horst-Wessel-Lied as the camera focuses on the giant
Swastika banner, which fades into a line of silhouetted men in Nazi party
uniforms, marching in formation as the lyrics "Comrades shot by the Red
Front and the Reactionaries march in spirit together in our columns" are
sung.
Origins[edit]
Shortly after
he came to power Hitler called me to see him and explained that he wanted a
film about a Party Congress, and wanted me to make it. My first reaction was to
say that I did not know anything about the way such a thing worked or the
organisation of the Party, so that I would obviously photograph all the wrong
things and please nobody - even supposing that I could make a documentary,
which I had never yet done. Hitler said that this was exactly why he wanted me
to do it: because anyone who knew all about the relative importance of the
various people and groups and so on might make a film that would be
pedantically accurate, but this was not what he wanted. He wanted a film
showing the Congress through a non-expert eye, selecting just what was most artistically
satisfying - in terms of spectacle, I suppose you might say. He wanted a film
which would move, appeal to, impress an audience which was not necessarily
interested in politics.— Leni Riefenstahl
Riefenstahl, a popular German actress, had directed her first
film called Das blaue Licht (The
Blue Light) in 1932. Around the same time she first heard Hitler speak at a
Nazi rally and, by her own admission, was impressed. She later began a
correspondence with him that would last for years. Hitler, by turn, was equally
impressed with Das blaue Licht,
and in 1933 asked her to direct a film about the Nazis' annual Nuremberg Rally. The Nazis had only recently taken
power amid a period of political instability (Hitler was the fourth Chancellor
of Germany in less than
a year) and were considered an unknown quantity by many Germans, to say nothing
of the world.
In Mein Kampf,[5] Hitler
talks of the success of British propaganda in World War I, believing people's
ignorance meant simple repetition and an appeal to feelings over reason would
suffice.[6] Hitler
chose Riefenstahl as he wanted the film as "artistically satisfying"[7] as
possible to appeal to a non-political audience, but he also believed that
propaganda must admit no element of doubt.[5] As
such, Triumph of the Will may be seen as a continuation of the
unambiguous World War I-style propaganda, though heightened by the film's
artistic or poetic nature.
Riefenstahl was initially reluctant, not because of any moral
qualms, but because she wanted to continue making feature films.[citation
needed] Hitler
persisted and Riefenstahl eventually agreed to make a film at the 1933
Nuremberg Rally called Der Sieg des Glaubens (Victory of Faith). However the
film had numerous technical problems, including a lack of preparation
(Riefenstahl reported having just a few days) and Hitler's apparent unease at
being filmed. To make matters worse, Riefenstahl had to deal with infighting by
party officials, in particular Joseph Goebbels who tried to have the film
released by the Propaganda Ministry. Though Der
Sieg des Glaubens apparently
did well at the box office, it later became a serious embarrassment to the
Nazis after SA Leader Ernst Röhm, who had a prominent role in the film, was
executed during the Night of the Long Knives. All references to Röhm were
ordered to be erased from German history, which included the destruction of all
copies of Der Sieg des
Glaubens. It was considered lost until a copy turned up in the 1990s in the
United Kingdom.
In 1934, Riefenstahl had no wish to repeat the fiasco of Der Sieg des Glaubens and initially recommended fellow
director Walter Ruttmann. Ruttmann's film, which would have
covered the rise of the Nazi Party from 1923 to 1934 and been more overtly propagandistic
(the opening text of Triumph
of the Will was his), did not
appeal to Hitler. He again asked Riefenstahl, who finally relented (there is
still debate over how willing she was) after Hitler guaranteed his personal
support and promised to keep other Nazi organizations, specifically the
Propaganda Ministry, from meddling with her film.
Production[edit]
The film follows a script similar to Der Sieg des Glaubens, which is
evident when one sees both films side by side. For example, the city of
Nuremberg scenes - even to the shot of a cat included in the city driving
sequence in both films. Furthermore, Herbert Windt reused
much of his musical score for that film in Triumph
des Willens, which he also scored. Riefenstahl shot Triumph of the Will on a budget of roughly 280,000RM
(approx. $110K USD 1934, $1.54M 2015).[8] With
that said, there were extensive preparations facilitated by the cooperation of
party members, the military, and vital help from high-ranking Nazis like
Goebbels. As Susan Sontag observed,
"The Rally was planned not only as a spectacular mass meeting, but as a
spectacular propaganda film."[9] Albert Speer, Hitler's personal architect, designed
the set in Nuremberg and did most of the coordination for the event. Pits were
dug in front of the speakers' platform so Riefenstahl could get the camera
angles she wanted, and tracks were laid so that her cameramen could get
traveling shots of the crowd. When rough cuts weren't up to par, major party
leaders and high-ranking public officials reenacted their speeches in a studio
for her.[10] Riefenstahl
also used a film crew that was extravagant by the standards of the day. Her
crew consisted of 172 people, including 10 technical staff, 36 cameramen and
assistants (operating in 16 teams with 30 cameras), nine aerial photographers,
17 newsreel men, 12 newsreel crew, 17 lighting men, two photographers, 26
drivers, 37 security personnel, four labor service workers, and two office
assistants. Many of her cameramen also dressed in SA uniforms so they could
blend into the crowds.
Riefenstahl had the difficult task of condensing an estimated 61
hours of film into two hours.[6] She
labored to complete the film as fast as she could, going so far as to sleep in
the editing room filled with hundreds of thousands of feet of film footage.[8]
Hitler
congratulates Riefenstahl in 1934
Soldiers
march past a saluting Hitler in Riefenstahl’s film of the 1934 Nazi party rally
in Nuremberg
Themes[edit]
Religion[edit]
This morning's
opening meeting... was more than a gorgeous show, it also had something of the mysticism and
religious fervor of an Easter or ChristmasMass in
a great Gothic cathedral.— Reporter William Shirer
Triumph of the Will is
sometimes seen as an example of Nazi political religion.
The primary religion in Germany before the Second World War was Christianity. With the primary sects being Roman Catholic and Protestant, the Christian views in this movie are
clearly meant to allow the movie to better connect with the intended audience.
Religion is a major theme in Triumph
of the Will. The film opens with Hitler descending god-like out of the
skies past twin cathedral spires. It contains many scenes of church bells
ringing, and individuals in a state of near-religious fervor, as well as a
prominent shot of Reich Protestant Bishop Ludwig Müller standing in his vestments among
high-ranking Nazis. It is probably not a coincidence that the final parade of
the film was held in front of the Nuremberg Frauenkirche.
In his final speech in the film, Hitler also directly compares the Nazi party
to a holy order, and the consecration of
new party flags by having Hitler touch them to the "blood banner" has
obvious religious overtones. Hitler himself is portrayed in a messianic manner,
from the opening where he descends from the clouds in a plane, to his drive
through Nuremberg where even a cat stops what it is doing to watch him, to the
many scenes where the camera films from below and looks up at him: Hitler,
standing on his podium, will issue a command to hundreds of thousands of
followers. The audience happily complies in unison.[11] As Frank P. Tomasulo comments,
"Hitler is cast as a veritable German Messiah who will save the nation, if
only the citizenry will put its destiny in his hands."[12]
Power[edit]
It is our will that
this state and this Reich shall endure through the coming millennia.— Hitler
Germany had not seen images of military power and strength since
the end of World War I, and the huge formations of men would remind the
audience that Germany was becoming a great power once again. Though the Labor
Service men carried spades, they handled them as if they were rifles. The Eagles and Swastikas could
be seen as a reference to the Roman Legions of
antiquity. The large mass of well-drilled party members could be seen in a more
ominous light, as a warning to dissidents thinking
of challenging the regime.
Hitler's arrival in an airplane should also be viewed in this
context. According to Kenneth Poferl, "Flying in an airplane was a luxury
known only to a select few in the 1930s, but Hitler had made himself widely
associated with the practice, having been the first politician to campaign via
air travel. Victory reinforced this image and defined him as the top man in the
movement, by showing him as the only one to arrive in a plane and receive an
individual welcome from the crowd. Hitler's speech to the SA also contained an
implied threat: if he could have Röhm, the commander of the hundreds of
thousands of troops on the screen, shot, it was only logical to assume that
Hitler could get away with having anyone executed."
Unity[edit]
As soon as our
own propaganda admits so much as a glimmer of right on the other side, the
foundation for doubt in our own right has been laid.— Hitler
It was very important to Adolf Hitler that his propaganda
messages carry a unified theme. If a country isn't unified in saying the enemy
is bad, the audience starts to have doubts. Unity is seen throughout this film,
even in the camps where soldiers live. The camp outside of Nuremberg is very
uniform and clean; the tents are aligned in perfect rows, each one the same as
the next. The men there also make a point not to wear their shirts, because
their shirts display their rankings and status. Shirtless they are all equals,
unified. When they march, it is in unison and they all carry their weapons
identically, one to another.
Hitler's message to the workers also includes the notion of
unity:
The concept of
labor will no longer be a dividing one but a uniting one, and no longer will
there be anybody in Germany who will regard manual labor any less highly than
any other form of labor.— Hitler
Children were also used to convey unity:
We want to be
a united nation, and you, my youth, are to become this nation. In the future,
we do not wish to see classes and castes, and you must not allow them to
develop among you. One day, we want to see one nation.— Hitler
Triumph of the Will has
many scenes that blur the distinction between the Nazi Party, the German state,
and the German people. Germans in peasant farmers' costumes and other
traditional clothing greet Hitler in some scenes. The torchlight processions,
though now associated by many with the Nazis, would remind the viewer of the medieval Karneval celebration.
The old flag of Imperial Germany is
also shown several times flying alongside the Swastika, and there is a ceremony
where Hitler pays his respects to soldiers who died in World War I (as well as
to President Paul von Hindenburg,
who had died a month before the convention). There is also a scene where the
Labor Servicemen individually call out which town or area in Germany they are
from, reminding the viewers that the Nazi Party had expanded from its
stronghold in Bavaria to
become a pan-German movement.
The Party is
Hitler - and Hitler is Germany just as Germany is Hitler!— Rudolf
Hess
Hitler's speeches[edit]
Among the themes presented, the desire for pride in Germany and
the purification of the German people is well exemplified through the speeches
and ideals of the Third Reich in Triumph of the Will.
The Totenehrung (honouring of dead) at the 1934
Nuremberg Rally. SS leader Heinrich Himmler, Adolf Hitler, and SA leader Viktor Lutze (from
L to R) on the stone terrace in front of the Ehrenhalle (Hall of Honour) in the Luitpoldarena.
In the background is the crescent-shaped Ehrentribüne (literally: tribune of honour).
In every speech given and shown in Triumph of the Will, pride is
one of the major focuses. Hitler advocates to the people that they should not
be satisfied with their current state and they should not be satisfied with the
descent from power and greatness Germany has endured since World War I. The
German people should believe in themselves and the movement that is occurring
in Germany. Hitler promotes pride in Germany through the unification of it.
Unifying Germany would force the elimination of what does not amount to the
standards of the Nazi regime.
To unify Germany, Hitler believes purification would have to
take place. This meant not only eliminating the citizens of Germany who are not
of the Aryan race, but the sick, weak, handicapped, or any
other citizens deemed unhealthy or impure. In Triumph
of the Will, Hitler preaches to the people that Germany must take a look at
itself and seek out that which does not belong: "[T]he elements that have
become bad, and therefore do not belong with us!" Though within the
context, he seems to be referring to the corrupt elements of the power
structure, it later could seem in hindsight to imply that the elimination of
the "inferior" people of Germany would, in theory, return Germany to
its once prideful and powerful former self. Julius Streicher stresses
the importance of purification in his speech, a direct reference to his own
virulent anti-semitism. Hundreds of thousands mentally sick
and disabled would be murdered in the Action T4, a programme run directly from Hitler's Chancellery (Kanzlei des Führers).
Hitler preaches to the people in his speeches that they should
believe in their country and themselves. The German people are better than what
they have become because of the impurities in society. Hitler wants them to
believe in him and believe what he wants to do for his people, and what he is
doing is for the country's and people's benefit. Hess says in the last scene of Triumph of the Will, "Heil
Hitler, hail victory, hail victory!" Everyone in attendance yells in
support. This verbal sign represents their faith to their leader and his most
trusted advisors that they believe in the Nazi cause. This is directly
following Hitler's yell, "Long live the National Socialist Movement! Long
live Germany!" and the crowd erupts with cheering and the fulfillment of
pride for themselves and their political party.
In the closing speech of Triumph
of the Will, Hitler enters the room from the back, appearing to emerge from
the people. After a one sentence introduction, he tells his faithful Nazis how
the German nation has subordinated itself to the Nazi Party because
its leaders are mostly of Germans. He promises that the new state that the
Nazis have created will endure for thousands of years. Hitler says that the
youth will carry on after the old have weakened. They close with a chant,
"Hitler is the Party, Hitler." The camera focuses on the large
Swastika above Hitler and the film ends with the images of this Swastika
imposed on Nazis marching in a few columns. His speech brought attention to the
rally and created a huge turnout in the following years. He attracted many
people in the way that he addressed the issues and his people. He spoke to them
as if it were a sermon and engaged the people. In 1934, over a million Germans
participated in the Nuremberg Rally.
Response[edit]
Triumph of the Will premiered
on 28 March 1935 at the Berlin Ufa Palace Theater and was an instant success.
Within two months the film had earned 815,000 Reichsmark, and Ufa considered it one of the three
most profitable films of that year. Hitler praised the film as being an
"incomparable glorification of the power and beauty of our Movement."
For her efforts, Riefenstahl was rewarded with the German Film Prize (Deutscher
Filmpreis), a gold medal at the 1935 Venice Biennale, and the Grand Prix at the 1937 World Exhibition in Paris.
However, there were few claims that the film would result in a mass influx of
"converts" to fascism and
the Nazis apparently did not make a serious effort to promote the film outside
of Germany. Film historian Richard Taylor also said that Triumph of the Will was not generally used for propaganda
purposes inside the Third Reich. The Independent wrote
in 2003: "Triumph of the Will seduced
many wise men and women, persuaded them to admire rather than to despise, and
undoubtedly won the Nazis friends and allies all over the world."[13]
The reception in other countries was not always as enthusiastic.
British documentarian Paul Rotha called
it tedious, while others were repelled by its pro-Nazi sentiments. During World
War II, Frank Capra helped
to create a direct response, through the film series called Why We Fight, a series of newsreels commissioned
by the United States government that spliced in footage from Triumph of the Will, but
recontextualized it so that it promoted the cause of the Allies instead. Capra later remarked that Triumph of the Will "fired no gun, dropped no bombs.
But as a psychological weapon
aimed at destroying the will to resist, it was just as lethal."[14] Clips
from Triumph of the Will were also used in an Allied propaganda
short called General Adolph
Takes Over,[15] set
to the British dance tune "The Lambeth Walk". The legions of marching
soldiers, as well as Hitler giving his Nazi salute, were made to look like
wind-up dolls, dancing to the music. The Danish resistance used to take over
cinemas and force the projectionist to show Swinging
the Lambeth Walk (as it was
also known); Erik Barrow has said: "The extraordinary risks were
apparently felt justified by a moment of savage anti-Hitler ridicule."[16] Also
during World War II, the poet Dylan Thomas wrote
a screenplay for and narrated These
Are The Men, a propaganda piece using Triumph
of the Will footage to
discredit Nazi leadership.
One of the best ways to gauge the response to Triumph of the Will was the instant and lasting
international fame it gave Riefenstahl. The Economist said
it "sealed her reputation as the greatest female filmmaker of the 20th
century."[17] For
a director who made eight films, only two of which received significant
coverage outside of Germany, Riefenstahl had unusually high name recognition
for the remainder of her life, most of it stemming from Triumph of the Will. However,
her career was also permanently damaged by this association. After the war,
Riefenstahl was imprisoned by the Allies for four years for allegedly being a
Nazi sympathizer and was permanently blacklisted by
the film industry. When she died in 2003–68 years after the film's premiere—her obituary received
significant coverage in many major publications, including the Associated Press,[18] The Wall Street Journal,[19]The New York Times,[20] and The Guardian,[21] most
of which reaffirmed the importance of Triumph
of the Will. Though the actual effectiveness of Triumph of the Will is hard to measure in terms of numbers
or statistics that actually state its effectiveness, its response from the
people is well documented with the amount of views and the popularity of the
movie during the time period.
Controversy[edit]
in custody in 1945
Like American filmmaker D. W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation, Triumph of the Will has been criticized as a use of
spectacular filmmaking to promote a profoundly unethical system.
In her defense, Riefenstahl claimed that she was naïve about the Nazis when she
made it and had no knowledge of Hitler's genocidal or anti-semitic policies.
She also pointed out that Triumph
of the Will contains
"not one single anti-semitic word",
although it does contain a veiled comment by Julius Streicher, the notorious Jew-baiter (who was
hanged after the Nuremberg trials), that "a people that does not
protect its racial purity will perish."
However, Roger Ebert has
observed that for some, "the very absence of anti-semitism in Triumph of the Will looks like a calculation; excluding
the central motif of almost all of Hitler's public speeches must have been a
deliberate decision to make the film more efficient as propaganda."[22]
Riefenstahl also repeatedly defended herself against the charge
that she was a Nazi propagandist, saying that Triumph
of the Will focuses on images
over ideas, and should therefore be viewed as a Gesamtkunstwerk (holistic
work of art).[citation
needed] In
1964, she returned to this topic, saying:
If you see this film again
today you ascertain that it doesn't contain a single reconstructed scene.
Everything in it is true. And it contains no tendentious commentary at all. It
is history. A pure historical film... it is film-vérité. It
reflects the truth that was then in 1934, history. It is therefore a
documentary. Not a propaganda film. Oh! I know very well what propaganda is.
That consists of recreating events in order to illustrate a thesis, or, in the face of certain events, to let one
thing go in order to accentuate another. I found myself, me, at the heart of an
event which was the reality of a certain time and a certain place. My film is
composed of what stemmed from that.[23]
However, Riefenstahl was an active participant in the rally,
though in later years she downplayed her influence significantly, claiming,
"I just observed and tried to film it well. The idea that I helped to plan
it is downright absurd." Ebert states that Triumph of the Will is "by general consent [one] of
the best documentaries ever made", but added that because it reflects the
ideology of a movement regarded by many as evil,
it poses "a classic question of the contest between art and morality: Is
there such a thing as pure art, or does all art make a political statement?"[22] When
reviewing the film for his "Great Movies" collection, Ebert reversed
his opinion, characterizing his earlier conclusion as "the received
opinion that the film is great but evil" and calling it "a terrible
film, paralyzingly dull, simpleminded, overlong and not even 'manipulative,'
because it is too clumsy to manipulate anyone but a true believer."[24]
Susan Sontag considers Triumph of the Will the "most successful, most purely
propagandistic film ever made, whose very conception negates the possibility of
the filmmaker's having an aesthetic or visual conception independent of
propaganda." Sontag points to Riefenstahl's involvement in the planning
and design of the Nuremberg ceremonies as evidence that Riefenstahl was working
as a propagandist, rather than as an artist in any sense of the word. With some
30 cameras and a crew of 150, the marches, parades, speeches, and processions
were orchestrated like a movie set for Riefenstahl's film. Further, this was
not the first political film made by Riefenstahl for the Third Reich (there was Victory of Faith, 1933), nor
was it the last (Day of Freedom,
1935, and Olympia,
1938). "Anyone who defends Riefenstahl's films as documentary",
Sontag states, "if documentary is to be distinguished from propaganda, is
being disingenuous. In Triumph
of Will, the document (the image) is no longer simply the record of
reality; 'reality' has been constructed to serve the image."[9]
Brian Winston's
essay on the film in The
Movies as History is largely
a critique of Sontag's analysis. Winston argues that any filmmaker could have
made the film look impressive because the Nazis' mise en scène was
impressive, particularly when they were offering it for camera re-stagings. In
form, the film alternates repetitively between marches and speeches. Winston
asks the viewers to consider if such a film should be seen as anything more
than a pedestrian effort. Like Rotha, he finds the film tedious, and believes
anyone who takes the time to analyze its structure will quickly agree.
Wehrmacht objections[edit]
The first controversy over Triumph
of the Will occurred even
before its release, when several generals in the Wehrmacht protested over the
minimal army presence in the film. Only one scene—the review of the German
cavalry—actually involved the German military. The other formations were party
organizations that were not part of the military.
The opposition of the generals, was not simply out of
personalized pique or vanity. As produced by Riefenstahl, Triumph of the Will, posits
Germany as a leaderless mass of lost souls without any organizing institutions,
or antecedent institutional leaders. And that the "new order"
embodied by the Nazi Party and Hitler, provides a both new, and a
singular/saving leader and institutional framework for the whole of the German
nation.
However, the Army had been, and had seen itself as being, an
institution that held shared responsibility for the leadership of the nation
and state since at least the time of Fredrick the Great. The leaders of that
Army had also been viewed throughout the history of the German-speaking peoples
as an integral part of the leadership cadre. By omitting the Army (along with
other institutions, e.g., the nobility, the Church, academia, business), the
film demonstrated that the Army, as well as its leaders, was
"disappeared" from what the Army considered to be its shared
leadership role in the state, National Socialist or otherwise. The Army's
leaders vehemently disagreed with this implied assertion of the film.
Hitler proposed his own "artistic" compromise where Triumph of the Will would open with a camera slowly
tracking down a row of all the "overlooked" generals (and placate
each general's ego). According to her own testimony, Riefenstahl refused his
suggestion and insisted on keeping artistic control over Triumph of the Will. She did
agree to return to the 1935 rally to make a film exclusively about the
Wehrmacht, which became Tag der
Freiheit: Unsere Wehrmacht (Day
of Freedom: Our Armed Forces).
Influences and legacy[edit]
as Adenoid Hynkel in The Great Dictator
Triumph of the Will remains
well known for its striking visuals. As one historian notes, "many of the
most enduring images of the [Nazi] regime and its leader derive from
Riefenstahl's film."[25]
Extensive excerpts of the film were used in Erwin Leiser's documentary Mein Kampf, produced in Sweden
in 1960. Riefenstahl unsuccessfully sued the Swedish production company
Minerva-Film for copyright violation, although she did receive forty thousand
marks in compensation from German and Austrian distributors of the film.[26]
In 1942, Charles A. Ridley of the British
Ministry of Information made
a short propaganda film, Lambeth
Walk – Nazi Style, which edited footage of Hitler and German soldiers from
the film to make it appear they were marching and dancing to the song "The Lambeth Walk".[note 1] The
parody of "The Lambeth Walk" (a British dance that had been popular
in swing clubs in Germany which the Nazi's denounced as "Jewish mischief
and animalistic hopping"[27]) so enraged Joseph Goebbels that
reportedly he ran out of the screening room kicking chairs and screaming
profanities.[28] The
propaganda film was distributed uncredited to newsreel companies, who would
supply their own narration.[28]
Charlie Chaplin's
classic satire The Great Dictator (1940) was inspired in large part by Triumph of the Will.[29] Frank Capra used
significant footage, with a mocking narration in the first installment of
the propagandistic film
produced by the United States Army Why We Fight as
an exposure of Nazi militarism and totalitarianism to American soldiers and
sailors.[30] The
film has been studied by many contemporary artists, including film directors
Sir Peter Jackson, George Lucas and Ridley Scott.
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