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Triumph of the Will then took on a second life as a sort of documentary of itself. MoMA created a 45-minute study version, begun in late 1940 and completed the following spring by Edward Kerns, a veteran editor employed by the Film Library.
Triumph of the Will (German: Triumph des Willens) is a 1935 documentary directed by Leni Riefenstahl and ordered by the government of Nazi Germany. It was shown once a year for propaganda purposes in every German cinema until 1945. The film was …
“Triumph of the Will,” says Dan Olson of the analytical video series Folding Ideas, “is not a triumph of cinema.” Already the proposition runs counter to what many of us learned in film studies classes, whose professors assured us that Leni Riefenstahl’s 1935 glorification of Nazi Germany, despite its thoroughly propagandistic ...
„Triumph of the Will”, un film de propagandă german al regizoarei Leni Riefenstahl, prezintă Congresul Național al Partidului Național Socialist Muncitoresc ...
- 104 min
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Triumph Of The Will is the official record of the Nazi party congress held at Nuremberg in 1934. It's a devastatingly brilliant piece of film-making - right from the opening sequence of Adolf Hitler descending from the skies, his plane shadowed against the clouds.
The greatest example of Historical Propaganda today, Riefenstahl's 1934 Nazi German film, Triumph of the Will, uses revolutionary film techniques, music & cinematography that gives this film the ability to speak to any audience.
The "Triumph of the Will" – the title comes from Hitler himself – proves to be a perfectly executed propaganda film lasting nearly two hours. After its premiere at Berlin's UFA Palast theater on March 28, 1935, it runs in 70 German cities. The Nazi Party film distributorship uses it for political education, and also shows it in schools.