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Hitler A Career
 
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Hitler A Career

Director: Joachim C. Fest Format: DVD
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Directors: Joachim C. Fest
  • Format: Black & White, Color, NTSC
  • Region: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada only. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Studio: International Historic Films, Inc.
  • DVD Release Date: November 15, 2001
  • Run Time: 151 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0000646UJ
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #120,591 in Movies & TV (See Bestsellers in Movies & TV)

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  • For more information about "Hitler A Career" visit the Internet Movie Database (IMDb)

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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48 of 48 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The best documentary on Hitler, July 16, 2003
By Candace Scott (Lake Arrowhead, CA, USA) - See all my reviews
I saw this movie for the first time upon its release in 1977 in a theatre in Germany. I've seen it subsequently in VHS format and was decidedly disappointed in the quality. However, this DVD version is as crisp as the original theatrical release, and the audio remains excellent. The entire quality of this version is really commendable. It's impossible to do justice to Hitler's career in two and half hours, but Fest's film remains the standard by which other Fuehrer documentaries must be judged. To its credit, the film focuses on Hitler's early rise to power, and there's great film from the 1927-1932 era. The period of 1933-39 is also strong, though the WWII years as a little hurried. A weakness is that few of Hitler's personal relationships are exlored, either with his various girlfriends or with the Nazi hierarchy.

There has been more early film of Hitler unearthed since this film was released, but they include an abundance of rare material that is not found elsewhere. The background music is not grating and the narrator is pleasing. There are also very few factual errors contained in this film. I highly recommend it, it's held up beautifully in the past 25 years.

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32 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A look into Hitler - and into German ways to cope with him, April 13, 2005
You might possibly want to buy the German edition along with the U.S. one - the latter comes with considerably better video quality, the former with a noticeably better audio track. (Also, the U.S. version has been edited. Footage of Hitler praising German car producers as well as chastising foreign ("Jewish", in his language) media have been cut from it.)

There are really some insights to be gained from this renowned movie. When I, a German, first watched it back in 1977, I noticed something I had not been aware of before - namely, the utter self-assurance of the rank-and-file Nazis surrounding Hitler, Goebbels et. al. Those lower ranking Nazis were very at ease with themselves, standing unimpressed while the audience gets excited by raucous speeches, coolly taxing the impact of their leaders. They behaved quite contrary to the closemouthed, insecure lower ranks I'd encountered during visits to what then was East Germany. It is a glimpse into what made Nazism different from Communism: The Nazis got elected, and they felt so. They did obviously not feel being pushed around by a clandestine party hierarchy, they felt legitimate. The interesting extra footage of 1932 campaign events that is included in the U.S. edition adds some more proof to it. Watch the guys standing behind Hitler as carefully as Hitler himself.

A major drawback of the U.S. edition are its insufficient subtitles. The distinctive, odd, at times archaic yet often very forceful and very frightful ways Hitler used and abused German words, idioms and Grammar peculiarities is not at all being reflected in the scant English sentences. Hitler's German language was psychopathic and creative at gthe same time. The subtitles give me a clue what would happen to John F. Kennedy's speeches being translated by North Koreans. Only the combination of Hitler's brutal voice and his command of words made him the terribly efficient orator he was. American viewers without knowledge of German might not experience the real chill his speeches are still sending down the spine, though watching his facial expression in the brief yet frightening "On January 30, the die has been cast"-footage might give you an idea about it.

Furthermore, the film allows for glimpses into the two sides of Hitler - the dreamer, the artist, and the mass murderer he was. As with his speeches, this combination gave him an quixotic, perverse appeal. The whining speech to Siemens workers shown in the movie displays that quite well - the forlorn soldier, the self-pitying muscular man with emotional eyes that made quite some elder ladies feel a lot of unclear vexing feelings for him in the '20s. Hitler knew how to evoke the notion that his emotional, forlorn trait cared for Germans, whereas his brutal shouting and psycho gestures were meant for imaginary and real adversaries only. Some people like that, even today.

Most interesting is the contrast between Hitler and his Gang, and the German well-off traditional gentry. It is mostly overlooked today how young the Nazis were when they came to power - Hitler, being only 44, already the granddaddy of them all, Goebbels, Himmler, Heydrich, most of the infamous SS under 40, even younger than 30 at that point of time. Determined youngsters fighting old ways and habits, and getting things done whereas the elder did just talking - quite some pictures in the movie let you feel what that mood might have meant for insecure young jobless Germans. Watch the former Chancellor von Papen rambling helplessly about Germany in his arrogant English, watch his pityful attempt at Napoleonic gestures, and compare that to the body language of the Nazi demagogues. You might get a feeling that politicians of his brand were a liability for the Republic. Watch President von Hindenburg addressing a huge youth rally in March 1933, the proverbial nice old somewhat gruffy grandfather (who wasn't so nice and lovely in WW I), and see Hitler wrapping it all up then with a powerful salute right after it, done, over, we are the new masters. Or see Prince August Wilhelm, clad in shorts, cigarette in his fingers, greeting a U.S. reporter in the U.S. edition's extra footage. He rants about Germany's plight in grotesquely distorted yet funny English, a man who did not grasp what was at hand, who nevertheless thought of him as embodying the natural upper social stratum. Those politicians weren't a match for the Nazis. (But see the young Countess looking warily as Hitler and Hindenburg walk by on that infamous "Day of Potsdam", 1933. She clearly senses something coming on.)

The German edition has been narrated by a then-famous German theatre actor, while the U.S. edition employs a professor. The U.S. narrative is by and large a translation of the German one, albeit with a slight, purposeful German accent and some new wording that sometimes adds a palpable anti-German perfume to the narrative. That is unfortunate, for it would hamper some viewers' willingness to grasp the tragedy, the feeling of betrayal, of shame, of bitterly and slowly accepted self-delusion (and self-pity) that marks the German original. It would also make some viewers to side with the depicted Nazis, just out of dislike for being patronized.

That said, the movie is a unique opportunity to delve into what and who made Germany go genocidal. As said before - it wasn't merely Hitler alone. His technique, unleashing emotions employed to attack a traditional old-fashioned society, is still a powerful example of what man can do to each other. I watched the movie as a warning not to believe that I, had I been exposed to that force, might have been surely immune to it. I have been lucky to not having been put up to that test.
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44 of 52 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars How Hitler come to Power, April 25, 2003
By A Customer
This DVD covers Hitler's rise to power and subsequent fall. It runs for around 2 1/2 hours and is very thorough and interesting viewing
It shows some of his speeches in full (with English subtitles) - one speech is over 5 minutes long - this enables you to see how his powerful oratory and his practiced use of it, captured the minds of people of the time.
The background to his rise is excellent. We see post WW1 Germany and the chaos that existed at the time -the breeding ground for the National Socialists.
Through the use of archival footage and an excellent commentary we follow Hitler from his early days as a rabble rouser, through the infamous Putsch to his final days in Berlin.
We see how he used the system to gain power, and how he used the youth of Germany to build his powerbase into the future.
This DVD does not attempt in any way to excuse Hitler or defend him (nor does this review). What it shows is how he came to power and how people followed him.
If you want to know how such an evil person could rise to such power then watch this DVD.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Buy this for the film ONLY, commentary pathetic, laughable
The commentary that accompanies this film is so bad that one is tempted not to recommend this DVD. However, for those who want to see excellent footage of Hitler and the Third... Read more
Published on November 24, 2005 by William B. Colohan

5.0 out of 5 stars the reich stuff.
This is prolly one of the best documentarys on dvd about the third reich that i have watched yet. I have seen alot. Read more
Published on August 21, 2005 by djstiff

4.0 out of 5 stars Not just another History Channel Special.
Not just another History Channel Special, this DVD covers more of
Hitler's rise to power with refreshing never seen before clear footage. Read more
Published on November 12, 2004 by Bill Koverchec

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