Leni Riefenstahl Movies
German actress/filmmaker
Leni Riefenstahl began her performing career as a dancer in 1920, studying with famed instructor
Mary Wigman. In 1926, she was cast by director
Dr. Arnold Fanck in the first of her many "mountain films" (a genre peculiar to Germany that had been popularized by
Fanck),
Peaks of Destiny (1926). The best known and most popular of her athletic starring vehicles was 1929's
The White Hell of Pitz Palu. Having learned the whys and wherefores of directing and photography from
Fanck,
Riefenstahl expressed a desire to direct a film herself. The result was
The Blue Light (1931), a true "auteur" effort: starring, directed by, edited by, and co-written by
Riefenstahl, it was released through the newly formed Leni Riefenstahl Studio-Film.
The Blue Light impressed many people, including
Adolf Hitler, who, upon gaining power in 1933, appointed
Riefenstahl "film expert" to the National Socialist Party. Her first effort on behalf of the Nazis was the cheaply produced 1933 documentary
Victory of the Faith. The following year, with the full cooperation of
Hitler and with 30 cameras and 120 assistants at her disposal,
Riefenstahl made a film of the fourth Nuremberg rally,
Triumph of the Will (1934). Observed objectively, the film is an artistic triumph; still, it is blatant propaganda on behalf of the Third Reich, and, as such, has engendered controversy ever since its release. The debate still rages as to whether
Riefenstahl was merely recording events that had been staged by the Party (as she has claimed), or whether she alone was responsible for the film's persuasive visual dynamics and production design.
Riefenstahl's next project was even more impressive:
Olympia (1936), a filmed record of the 1936 Berlin Olympics. Though attacked by latter-day critics as being "fascistic" in its celebration of the muscular male physique,
Olympia is virtually bereft of proselytizing. To be sure, there are plenty of shots of
Hitler and his minions (no one knows to this day if the film was Nazi-sponsored or independently produced), but just as much screen time is allotted to the decidedly non-Aryan athlete
Jesse Owens. Many of
Riefenstahl's innovations and techniques in
Olympia -- the slow-motion shots of the athletes, the telephoto lens used for close-ups of the events, the ground-level shots, the overhead panoramas taken from blimps -- have been utilized by sports documentaries and broadcasts ever since.
Olympia would be the last of
Riefenstahl's 1930s films; she turned down as many assignments as she received from the Nazis, and attempted unsuccessfully to launch two large-scale historical epics.
Riefenstahl's last feature film, three years in the making, was
Tiefland (1943), a magnificently photographed return to the mountain-film genre. She returned to acting in this film as a Spanish dancer, and also utilized gypsy concentration camp inmates as extras (she would later claim she had no idea what fate was in store for these unfortunate souls). When Germany fell to the Allies in 1945,
Riefenstahl was arrested and her films confiscated. She spent three years in various allied prison camps, then underwent several more years of persecution on the grounds that she had been a top-ranking Nazi official. In fact, she had never joined the Party (though she was quite vocal in her support of
Hitler), and in 1952 she was finally exonerated of all charges. Still, she never made another film in Germany, even though several of the more rabidly pro-Nazi directors -- notably
Veit Harlan, who'd helmed the viciously anti-Semitic
Jud Suss -- continued making movies without any difficulty.
In 1956,
Riefenstahl traveled to Africa to begin work on Black Cargo, a documentary on the modern slave trade made on behalf of the London Anti-Slave Society; this project came to an end when she was seriously injured in a car accident in Kenya. She returned to Africa in 1961 to photograph the fascinating rituals of the Mesakin Nuba tribe. Though this odyssey resulted in an attractive coffee-table book of photographs,
Riefenstahl never assembled her film footage into a feature. She was honored with numerous international film awards in the 1970s, though the ceremonies were often interrupted by the protests of Holocaust victims. In later interviews,
Riefenstahl allowed that the end result of Nazism was horrendous, but she refuses to apologize for her work; she is fond of quoting a pro-
Hitler comment allegedly made by
Winston Churchill in the mid-'30s, arguing that if
Churchill could not foresee the horrors to come, how could she? Those interviewers expecting to meet an embittered, defensive old woman were often amazed at
Riefenstahl's youthful vigor, softspokenness, courtesy, and sense of humor.
In her nineties,
Riefenstahl became an enthusiastic scuba diver, hoping to assemble the underwater films that she lensed into one last documentary feature. In 1991, she published her autobiography, Leni Riefenstahl: A Memoir, and in 1993, she was the subject of a lively, intriguing British documentary,
The Wonderful, Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl. In 2002,
Riefenstahl did manage to compile a film of her underwater footage entitled Impressionen Unter Wasser (Underwater Impressions), though its running length of 45 minutes seemed short considering the 2,000-plus dives during which she had shot the footage.
Leni Riefenstahl died in Berlin on September 8, 2003, her body increasingly pained by injuries she had sustained over the years. She was 101. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

- 1928
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This dramatic account of the Austrian royal family at the turn of the 20th century focuses on Crown Prince Rudolf (Alfons Fryland) and his cousin Franz Ferdinand (Willi Hubert), the heirs to the emperor, Francis Joseph I (Fritz Spira), and his wife Sissi (Erna Morena). Rudolf acquiesces to an arranged marriage with Belgium's Princess Stefanie (Maly Delschaft), but they separate after she gives birth to a daughter instead of a male heir. Rudolf begins an affair with Baroness Mary Vetsera (Leni Riefenstahl), but their relationship is attacked by both his wife and the emperor. When the baroness becomes pregnant with Rudolf's child, the two lovers choose to commit suicide together. Not long after, Empress Sissi is murdered in Switzerland, and Franz Ferdinand weds his lover Countess Chotek (Minje van Gooten), marrying beneath his rank. The couple is assassinated in Sarajevo in 1914 and their deaths lead to the onset of World War One. 28/100 ~ Nicole Gagne, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Alfons Fryland, Willi Hubert, (more)

- 1927
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Writer/director Arnold Fanck reteamed Leni Riefenstahl and Luis Trenker, the stars of his previous hit Der Heilige Berg, for this light-hearted "mountain film," which has the sub-title "an improbable but happy story." The goatherd Gita (Riefenstahl) is a skilled mountaineer who lives in a small village in the Alps, where she is pursued by her less athletic suitor Toni (Trenker). Michael Treuherz (Hans Schneeberger, also one of the film's cinematographers), a wealthy hypochondriac, comes to the mountains on a restorative vacation, and is rescued by Gita when he topples into a stream. She and Toni teach him how to ski, and Gita offers herself as the prize in a ski race. Treuherz wins and he and Gita marry and raise a family in the Alps. 27/112 ~ Nicole Gagne, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Leni Riefenstahl, Luis Trenker, (more)

- 1931
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Der Weisse Rausch (aka The Ski Chase and The White Ecstasy) was directed by Dr. Arnold Franck, the man who put the German "mountain film" genre on the map. The story concerns a group of young and healthy vacationers who meet annually at a Tyrolean skiing resort. Each year, hero Hanns Schneider (who also wrote the script) and heroine Leni Riefenstahl engage in a friendly rivalry on the slopes. As their expertise on skis grows with each passing day, so too does their love for one another. Filmed in 1931, Der Weisse Rausch was released in the U.S. in 1938, by which time the Jewish Hannes Schneider had been thrown into a Nazi work camp and actress-turned-director Leni Riefenstahl had become the "official" filmmaker of the Third Reich. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Leni Riefenstahl, Guzzi Lantschner, (more)

- 1995
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Utilizing computer-generated effects and creative splicing to place Germany's most famous living directors in a fantasy movie house, filmmaker Edgar Reitz takes an innovative approach toward exploring the history of German cinema. In this magical theater, directors such as Leni Riefenstahl, Detlev Buck, Volker Schloendorff, Margarethe von Trotta, Wim Wenders, Werner Herzog "discuss" the state of German cinema with a focus on New German Cinema. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- 1972
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Examine the incredible life of the woman who made films for Hitler including Triumph of the Will. Also explore her own early career as an actress. ~ Rovi
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- 1976
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A combination of visual art and electronic music are offered. ~ Rovi
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- 1938
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- Add Olympia to Queue
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Having proven her mettle with her still-astonishing propaganda epic Triumph of the Will, German filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl furthered her reputation with the two-part Olympia, an all-inclusive filmed record of the 1936 Berlin Olympics. In its original 220-minute form, the film was designed as a paean to Aryan superiority, likening the strong-limbed young German athletes with the godlike participants of the ancient Olympic games. By accident or design, however, the film transcends politics, resulting in an across-the-board tribute to all the Olympic partcipants -- even those whose racial makeup did not come up to the "pure" standards established by the Third Reich. This is especially true in the first portion of the film, in which black American runner Jessie Owens emerges as the star. The second half of the film is the more impressive technically, with Riefenstahl utilizing an astonishing variety of camera speeds and angles to record the diving competition. Working 16 hours a day, seven days a week, Riefenstahl and her staff were often denied desirable camera angles, forcing them to improvise with telephoto lenses; the results are often far more dramatically impressive than the up-close-and-personal approach taken by contemporary TV cameramen. After an editing process that took nearly 18 months, Riefenstahl added icing to the cake with a richly evocative soundtrack -- an added touch which, so far as the filmmaker was concerned, "made" the picture. Inasmuch as the German government was still trying to curry favor with the outside world in early 1938, Olympia was shipped out in various reedited versions, each favoring the athletes of the release country. Many English-language versions avoided any references to Hitler or Nazism -- quite a feat, considering the preponderence of swastikas at the Olympic site. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1927
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Originally titled Der Heilige Berg, Peaks of Destiny is another of the legendary and very well-received "mountain films" of German director/geologist Dr. Arnold Fanck. It also represented the screen debut of Fanck's most celebrated protegee, future director Leni Riefenstahl. The actress is cast as a vampish dancer who comes between best friends and fellow mountaineers Luis Trenker (who likewise became a director of note) and Ernest Peterson. Much of the action takes place on skis, with the outstanding exception of the finale when all three protagonists are stranded on a perilous mountain peak after one of the men tries to kill the other. Though it made hardly a ripple in the U.S., Peaks of Destiny was a huge moneymaker in Europe. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Leni Riefenstahl, Luis Trenker, (more)

- 1933
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- Add S.O.S. Iceberg to Queue
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In the same year that she directed Victory of the Faith (1933), her first of several famous cinematic projects for the Nazi Party, German actress and filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl played a supporting role in this epic adventure, co-written and co-directed by her frequent "mountain film" collaborator Dr. Arnold Fanck. Rod La Rocque stars as Dr. Carl Lawrence, leader of a mission to Greenland to recover the lost records of the ill-fated, real-life Alfred Lothar Wegener polar expedition of 1929-30. Lawrence's party includes experienced explorer/guides, as well as an adventure-seeking financier, who is in over his head and slowly driven mad by the perils of the voyage. When Lawrence's band is trapped on an iceberg, Lawrence's wife Ellen (Riefenstahl) -- a famous female pilot fashioned after Amelia Earhart -- takes off on a rescue mission, but she crashes her aircraft upon landing and is stranded along with the others. Before total disaster claims the Lawrence party, however, native eskimos and Major Ernst Udet (playing himself) arrive via kayak to save the day. Two surviving members of the Wegener party served as advisors for this well-received Man vs. Nature treatise, filmed on location in Greenland. ~ Karl Williams, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Rod La Rocque, Leni Riefenstahl, (more)

- 1931
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Footage of Leni Riefenstahl from two of the "mountain films" of Arnold Fanck: Der Heilige Berg (1926) and Der Weiss Rausch (1931). ~ Nicole Gagne, Rovi
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- 2000
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This volume of Short -- the DVD-format magazine that collects award-winning short films from around the world -- features six outstanding movies that you're not likely to see at your local multiplex. The titles include True, a comedy that inspired the popular Budweiser "whassup?" commercials; Tar Der Freiheit, a 1935 documentary on the German Army that Leni Riefenstahl made shortly after Triumph of the Will; Why Liberace?, a look at the late showman as both musician and cultural phenomenon; Clown Car, a satiric comedy in which a pair of clowns become stranded in the desert and are forced to fend for themselves; Serpent and the Sandman, a look at the work of poet Ben Porter Lewis; and Sky Above, Heaven Below, a drama about a young girl and her relationship with her sister in China before the revolution. Several of the shorts include alternate commentary tracks from the director, allowing you to hear them discuss the film as you watch, while others also have storyboard features, permitting the viewer to compare the film's pre-production sketches with the final product. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- 1930
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- Add Storm over Mount Blanc to Queue
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This romantic "mountain film" takes place on Mont Blanc, where the meteorologist Hannes (Sepp Rist) resides in an isolated observatory. Hella Armstrong (Leni Riefenstahl), who lives in the valley below with her astronomer father (Friedrich Kayssler), sees Hannes's observatory while flying over it in an airplane with stunt pilot Ernst Udet (who plays himself). She subsequently visits Hannes and the two fall in love. He urges her to visit his ailing musician friend Walter (Mathias Wieman), but when she does he starts to fear that they have become lovers. The distraught Hannes decides to stay for another year of work on Mont Blanc, but his hands freeze when he loses his gloves and is caught in a storm. Unable to build a fire, he tries to descend to safety but the cracks that have formed in the glacier compel him to turn back. Hella picks up his mayday message on the radio in her father's observatory and heads to Mont Blanc with a rescue team. Before she reaches Hannes, Udet is able to fly in and save his life by building a fire. 30/110 ~ Nicole Gagne, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Leni Riefenstahl, Sepp Rist, (more)

- 1935
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Originally Tag Der Freheit, Days of Freedom, filmed during the 1935 Nuremberg rally, is Leni Reifenstahl's smaller-scale follow-up to her pro-Nazi paean Triumph of the Will. The focus here is on the German army, where Adolf Hitler, Rudolf Hess, and Hermann Goering oversee an endless parade of troops, tanks, and weaponry. The film ends with a montage of Nazi flags and an astonishing shot of German planes flying overhead in a swastika formation! Many modern viewers may have trouble enduring this grim homage to Nazi military power. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1952
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- 1932
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The Blue Light (Das Blaue Licht) is widely regarded as the best of the German "mountain" films of the early 1930s. Leni Riefenstahl both directed and starred in this film, playing a free-spirited gamine who dares to climb a precipitous mountain peak. Because she is the only member of her community to accomplish this, she is regarded as something of a witch. When she discovers a hidden crystal cave, the villagers change their tune and follow her up the mountain, stripping the cave of its riches. She responds to this symbolic rape by killing herself. It was The Blue Light which impressed Hitler and Goebbels enough to engage Leni Riefenstahl to direct the Nazi party's subsequent propaganda films. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Leni Riefenstahl, Beni Fuehrer, (more)

- 1926
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- Add The Holy Mountain to Queue
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Leni Riefenstahl made her film debut in this "mountain film" by writer/director Arnold Fanck, and went on to appear in five more under his direction. In Der Heilige Berg she plays the professional dancer Diotima who finds herself the apex of a love triangle when she is pursued by two mountain climbers, Vigo (Ernst Petersen) and his unnamed older friend (Luis Trenker). Diotima is drawn to the elder climber but can't refrain from encouraging Vigo's attentions as well in a spirited skiing session. She has a moment of intimacy with Vigo, and when the friend sees them together he angrily challenges Vigo to a dangerous climbing tour. During the trek he causes Vigo to fall but repents and rescues him. Both men, however, soon become lost in the mountains, and they perish before Diotima and the rescue team can reach them. ~ Nicole Gagne, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Leni Riefenstahl, Luis Trenker, (more)

- 1929
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- Add The White Hell of Pitz Palu to Queue
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After his wife falls to her death in a glacier crevasse, Dr. Johannes Krafft (Gustav Diessl) wanders alone through the Bernina Alps and becomes known as the legendary "Spirit of the Mountain." He encounters Maria Majoni (Leni Riefenstahl) and Hans Brandt (Ernst Petersen) in a mountain shelter, and he and Maria find themselves drawn to each other. Krafft heads out alone the next day but is pursued by the jealous Hans. Maria goes after Hans, who breaks his leg trying to follow Krafft. She and Krafft stay with him, and a powerful storm threatens their lives. After several days Krafft attempts to climb down to get help but freezes to death. The rescue team finds Maria and Hans and returns them to safety. Note that this popular silent "mountain film" was also released in Germany in a shortened (92-minute) sound version in 1935. 29/127 ~ Nicole Gagne, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Leni Riefenstahl, Ernst Petersen, (more)

- 1993
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- Add The Wonderful, Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl to Queue
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In the 1930s, Leni Riefenstahl was arguably the most important and accomplished female filmmaker of her generation; however, since her primary sponsor was Adolf Hitler, and her best-known work was a hagiographic documentary on the 1934 Nazi Party congress entitled Triumph of the Will, a long and unending debate has raged whether Riefenstahl was a fascist propagandist or a talented artist whose crime was merely doing a job too well. Macht der Bilder: Leni Riefenstahl is an exhaustive two-part look at Riefenstahl's life and work, exploring her early careers as a dancer and actress, reconstructing the making of Triumph of the Will and Olympia (an elaborate and visually striking record of the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games), and her later success as a still photographer, cultural anthropologist, and underwater filmmaker. While the film was made with Riefenstahl's participation, director Ray Muller does not shrink from exploring both sides of the issues of her work with the Nazi regime (she claims to have never been a member of the party and to have been unaware of the genocide of Jews and other "undesirables," while Muller presents evidence that strongly suggests the contrary) even as it celebrates her accomplishments and fierce determination (as a girl she could climb mountains in her bare feet, and in her nineties she was still an avid scuba diver). Macht der Bilder: Leni Riefenstahl was released in the United States under the title The Wonderful, Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- 1954
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After spending the 1930s as the Third Reich's principal cinematic chronicler, Leni Riefenstahl returned to fictional films with Tiefland. According to Riefenstahl, she had refused to make any more propaganda pictures--"for good reasons," she explained enigmatically--choosing instead to direct a period romance, based on an old Spanish play and opera by Eugen d'Albert. Riefenstahl cast herself as the central character, Marta, a Spanish dancer who becomes the romantic bone of contention between humble shepherd Franz Eichberger and imperious marquis Bernhard Minetti. While the material seems to cry out for music, Riefenstahl plays the story straight, though much of the acting can certainly be described as operatic. In one scene, the director utilized a band of gypsies as atmosphere extras; as soon as their scenes were completed, the gypsies were returned to their Nazi concentration camp--where most of them were doomed to extermination. Personally financed by Riefenstahl, Tiefland was filmed between 1942 and 1944, which explains the presence of Maria Koppenhofer (who died in 1948). Final editing was not completed until around 1953, at which time Riefenstahl personally accompanied her print of the film to selected showings in Germany and Austria. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Leni Riefenstahl, Franz Eichberger, (more)

- 1934
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- Add Triumph of the Will to Queue
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Triumph of the Will (Triumph des Willens) is a filmed record of the 1934 Nazi Party Convention, in Nuremberg. No, it is more than just a record: it is an exultation of Adolf Hitler, who from the moment his plane descends from Valhalla-like clouds is visually characterized as a God on Earth. The "Jewish question" is disposed of with a few fleeting closeups; filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl prefers to concentrate on cheering crowds, precision marching, military bands, and Hitler's climactic speech, all orchestrated, choreographed and illuminated on a scale that makes Griffith and DeMille look like poverty-row directors. It has been alleged that the climactic rally, "spontaneous" Sieg-Heils and all, was pre-planned according to Riefenstahl's specifications, the better to take full advantage of its cinematic potential. Allegedly, propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels resented the presence and intrusion of a woman director, but finally had to admit that her images, achieved through the use of 30 cameras and 120 assistants, were worth a thousand speeches. Possibly the most powerful propaganda film ever made, Triumph of the Will is also, in retrospect, one of the most horrifying. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1933
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Sieg des Glaubens is the first documentary directed by Leni Riefenstahl, who was hired despite opposition from the Nazi officials that resented employing a woman -- and a non-Party member too. Her film recounts the Fifth Party Rally of the Nazi Party, which occurred in Nuremberg from August 30 to September 3 in 1933. Like her Nazi documentaries of 1935, the short Tag der Freiheit and the classic propaganda feature Triumph of the Will, Sieg des Glaubens has no voiceover commentary or explanatory titles. The activities captured by Riefenstahl's cameras include the welcoming of foreign diplomats and other politicians at the Nuremberg train station; Adolf Hitler's arrival at the airport and his meeting with important party members; massive Nazi troop parades; and Hitler's speech on the tenth anniversary of the National Socialist movement. ~ Nicole Gagne, Rovi
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