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Our Hitler: A Film from Germany

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Our Hitler: A Film from Germany

This inventive, exhaustive seven-hour film looks at the rise, reign and demise of Adolf Hitler. German director Hans Jürgen Syberberg, who was a child during World War II, doesn't try to recreate history to the letter. Instead, he places his actors -- many of whom play several roles -- on a stage and has them reenact events based on and inspired by Hitler's life. The action combines traditional narration and historical characters, but also idiosyncratic tweaks, like the use of puppets.

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Release : 1977
Rating : 7.5
Studio :
Crew : Director of Photography,  Director, 
Cast : Harry Baer Heinz Schubert Peter Kern Hellmut Lange Alfred Edel
Genre : Drama

Cast List

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Reviews

Vashirdfel
2018/08/30

Simply A Masterpiece

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SnoReptilePlenty
2018/08/30

Memorable, crazy movie

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ThedevilChoose
2018/08/30

When a movie has you begging for it to end not even half way through it's pure crap. We've all seen this movie and this characters millions of times, nothing new in it. Don't waste your time.

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Kayden
2018/08/30

This is a dark and sometimes deeply uncomfortable drama

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Horst in Translation ([email protected])
2016/07/19

"Hitler - ein Film aus Deutschland" or "Hitler: A Film from Germany" (and there are more titles for this one) is a West German film from 1977, so this one will have its 40th anniversary next year. The writer and director is Hans-Jürgen Syberberg, a filmmaker who turned 80 last year and he is known for his films being usually fairly long ("Parisfal", "Ludwig"), but with this one he takes runtime certainly to the next level. This movie runs for over 7 hours and it is among the longest films ever made I am sure. It consists of 4 acts, 3 of them being roughly 1.5 hours long and the second act being the longest at almost 2.5 hours. The film features some well-known German actors from the 1970s and it won Peter Kern also a German Film Award (together with another movie). The strong thing about this film is that it is basically a great, pretty unique lesson on German history and that includes culture, music, film and most of all politics. But even if I was always interested in German politics of the first half 20th century, I must say this one dragged a lot on many occasions and I cannot say I enjoyed the watch a whole. I did enjoy the music for sure and my favorite sequence was probably everything that had directly to do with Hitler, such as the brilliant ventriloquist sequence. But these are only exceptions taken from a film that is mediocrity all in all and I believe the film does not have even close to enough when it comes to such memorable sequences. Apart from that, i also think a film should be seen on one day and this is almost impossible with this one we have here. I have to give it a thumbs-down. Not recommended.

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billcurry-1
2012/12/24

Most of this movie consists of people addressing the camera, while surrounded by ugly puppets and other pieces of junk. I'm astounded by the positive reviews. I'm left with only a slightly better knowledge as to why many Germans followed Hitler. This film would have made a much better book, with footnotes, citations of sources, and suggestions for further reading. But perhaps that was impossible. As I believe George Harrison once said, "Avant-garde means haven't got a clue." What is the difference between someone talking to you while he sits next to a candelabra and your reading what he has to say in a book? The same goes for speakers with old war film clips as background. I suppose one could argue that watching this film is a more visceral experience than reading a book on the same subject. However, this argument is undercut if the visceral experience is nausea.

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jimi99
2011/01/22

I don't know how to begin to "review" this cinematic experience, as I felt immersed in the film rather than trying to get my mind around it entirely. This work is neither an apologia for Hitler and the Third Reich nor a condemnation, but a serious attempt by a true intellectual and film auteur, Syberberg, to look at it ALL from every side, the horror and evil as well as the cultural, historical, and philosophical foundations of Hitler and the German people.The film is subtitled "A Film From Germany" because it is plumbs not only the depths of Nazism and World War II but the entire German psyche. It attempts to present, through hard facts, historical documents, films and photographs, and also through dream, metaphor, and stunningly haunting tableaux, what Hitler really MEANT and what he continues to mean. There are many excellent actors portraying both well-known figures like Himmler and lesser known individuals like Hitler's valet who relate what might seem like endless minutiae of Hitler's daily life but do add a great deal to the ultimate picture of the man about whom so much has been written. It seems that if you don't revile him completely, even today, you are suspected of being a neo-fascist yourself, but this film attempts to offer a complete picture and by extension, a baring of the German soul and what is referred to on several occasions as their "happy guilt".One issue I have is with the English subtitles. There are so many typographical and spelling errors that one could only call it sloppy. I don't know why a film of this magnitude that took so long coming to home video shouldn't have had more scrupulous editing. Considering how many talking heads there are in the film and the volume of exposition, it was hard enough to keep up with the subtitles without stumbling over the mistakes. On the plus side, there is a lot of English voice-over that provides some breathing space for us Anglos.And one last comment on the historical context. Considering the film was made in 1977, 34 years ago, much has changed in the world, in Europe, and in the global culture, that the film presciently hints at, not the least of which is the continued emergence of Germany and Japan both economically and democratically. One important point "Our Hitler" made was that Hitler was probably the apotheosis of democracy, rising as he did from the middle class and glorifying the common people, and being democratically elected by them. What he did with that mandate was probably the most horrifying and endlessly fascinating stories of the 20th century.

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hasosch
2009/02/16

Recently, I am noticing that a remarkably high percentage of those German films that are released on international dvds have as topic the Nazi time. But not enough with this newer productions, one is even eager to re-release older movies about this one and the same topic, which seems to be of such great interest. What are the reasons? Is it the still bad conscience of the Germans themselves which cannot be made responsible for what their fathers or grandfathers did? Or do the sons and grandsons of the "liberators" of Nazi Germany have to indulge now in their past, because the present does not look so glorious anymore? Syberberg's "Hitler" is grandly overrated, in my opinion. It is a pseudo-intellectual work which is pretending much more than what it really is. In almost 8 hours the director scatters the undigested morsels out of textbooks in philosophy, German literature and film history over his audience. Or do you know what Hegel has to do with the Third Reich? Do you know why Oskar Loerke, Ernst Stadler, August Stramm and the dadaists come to "honor" in this movie? Do you really believe that the "Hollywood fascists" ended the carrier of Erich von Stroheim, leaded by Gloria Swanson? This film is crowded with poetic and metaphysical "knowledge" that is just picked up from encyclopedias, mixed with pure nonsensical "interpretations" and randomly spread in the legion of massively overlong monologues. If you watch attentively, the movie presents you a full contents of assumingly every experimental shot that you can find listed in the histories of film technique - of course, randomly used, the absence of any recognizable structure being blamed to the lack of understanding of an allegedly illiterate audience.Principally, I like the idea of digging out classics of the German New Wave between the Oberhausener Manifest and its end with the dead of Fassbinder. But where, where are the films of Alexander Kluge, Peter, Thomas and Viktor Schamoni, Werner Schroeter, Horst Bienek, Peter Lilienthal, Jean-Marie Straub, Ula Stöckl, Peter Fleischmann, Hans W. Geissendörfer, Ulrike Ottinger, Walter Bockmayer? At the same time when dubious film companies are re-releasing the unrestored and horribly dubbed German pre-New Wave movies, the so-called "Kriminalfilme" and "Lederhosenfilme" and present them to a surprised American audience that cannot have any idea about the background on which these movies had been made, at this very same time the films of the New Wave generation that purposely cleaned up with this so-called "Papa's Cinema", are simply not available on international dvds. And if you buy the German dvds, than you will realize that practically all are not region-free. Well understood, we speak here about several hundreds of films which would be well worth seeing international distribution. However, Syberberg's "Hitler" does definitely not belong to the pearls. Its director released "Hitler" for free on his own homepage and offers region-free copies of his collected works for a dumping price.

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