The Guardian (USA)

Hitler film made in Slovakia as Germany resists production of Nazi dramas

- Dalya Alberge

The German filmmakers behind a forthcomin­g major feature film about Hitler had to shoot it in secret, due to “resistance” in Germany against dramas “in which Hitler takes centre-stage for fear that the audience will start identifyin­g with the protagonis­t”, according to its historical adviser.

The film, titled Führer und Verführer (Führer and Demagogue), was turned down for public funding in Germany and was made instead in Bratislava.

In the pursuit of accuracy, Thomas Weber, professor of history at Aberdeen University and an internatio­nallyrenow­ned academic, was appointed as its historical adviser.

He said understand­able concerns about humanising demagogues responsibl­e for one of the darkest chapters of human history. “For this reason, there are hardly any films about Goebbels, Hitler and other demagogues in which they are not cast as comic figures or merely appear as minor characters in supporting roles.” The 2004 drama, Downfall, focussed only on a “short snapshot” of Hitler’s life – his final days.

Weber added: “If we want to thwart the demagogues of our own time, film and television production­s must abandon the long-standing, though entirely understand­able, reluctance to turn the spotlight on Hitler, Mussolini, Goebbels and Stalin.

“We can only tear off the masks and see them as they really were and how they were able to succeed if we place them centre-stage on film.”

He argued, for example, that photograph­s and film footage used in most documentar­ies about the Third Reich tend to use propaganda material produced by the Nazis and therefore unwittingl­y reproduce Goebbels’s propaganda.

The new film focusses on an informatio­n warfare in which Goebbels, arguably history’s greatest manipulato­r of the masses and the father of fake news, created rousing images of flagwaving crowds and anti-Semitic films that prepared the people for the mass murder of the Jews.

Führer und Verführer, which will be released in cinemas next year, stars Fritz Karl as Hitler and Robert Stadlober as Goebbels.

It is directed by Joachim Lang, who said: “The film shows the perpetrato­rs as human beings, with all the attributes of evil. Only the fictional form allows proximity to the characters and their mendacious depravity.”

He added: “If such criminals are portrayed cinematica­lly solely as onedimensi­onal marginal figures or even as

screaming buffoons, we cannot understand them or their deeds. Nor can we draw any lessons for the present.”

The film takes the viewer backstage, making them more wary of the power of images and manipulati­ve strategies as they watch Goebbels create his deceptions and distortion­s of reality in conceiving and rehearsing speeches.

Lang spoke of the film’s emphasis on accuracy: “The dialogue almost exclusivel­y contains verifiably accurate quotations from a wide variety of sources.”

The drama is all the more powerful because it interweave­s fictionali­sed scenes of the main protagonis­ts and their Nazi henchmen with archival footage and the testimonie­s of actual Holocaust survivors. They include Margot Friedlande­r, 101, whose parents and brother were murdered in the Auschwitz death camp.

Lang said: “What the victims say is both the terrible reality and a stark warning. They survived and provide us with testimony that they have the last word.”

After a preview screening, the survivors were reportedly deeply affected. One of them remained silent for several minutes before hugging the director, telling him that she wished such a film had been made ten or 20 years ago, to stop the rise of radical right-wing populist groups.

Lang said that examining the past is all the more crucial when far-right parties are in government, when antiSemiti­c acts of violence are increasing and when the crimes of the Third Reich are being trivialise­d to an ever greater extent: “For me, the sentence of Auschwitz survivor Primo Levi, with which our film begins and ends, holds true: “It happened so it can happen again. That is the core of what we have to say.”

 ?? Photograph: Zeitsprung Pictures/ Südwestrun­dfunk ?? Fritz Karl plays Adolf Hitler in the soon-to-be released Führer and Demagogue.
Photograph: Zeitsprung Pictures/ Südwestrun­dfunk Fritz Karl plays Adolf Hitler in the soon-to-be released Führer and Demagogue.

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