
Vendor |
---|
Hanser |
Published by |
Zsolnay Verlag (February 2019) |
Original language |
German |
Original title |
Diktatoren im Kino |
Themas |
Films, cinemaPolitical structures: totalitarianism & dictatorship |
Dictators in the Cinema
Lenin, Mussolini, Hitler, Goebbels, Stalin
Lenin, Mussolini, Hitler, Goebbels and Stalin: the films they saw, the directors – and actresses – they worshipped. And how they used the cinema for their own purposes. Peter Demetz on dictators, power and manipulation.
Viva Villa was one of Hitler’s favourite films – and he recognised himself in the main character, Pancho Villa, the Mexican general. Yet Joseph Goebbels considered the film
to be too dangerous to show at the cinema. Goebbels not only dictated the programme of films shown in Nazi Germany, but also became increasingly involved in the medium as an author and dramaturge. Even Stalin, who recognised the importance of the medium
at a late stage, immediately interfered in productions. And even Lenin, whose main
interest was in industrial and political educational films (for example, on the subject of
hydraulic peat production), controlled the film industry. But the first to recognise and
use the power of cinema for propaganda ends was Mussolini. With his studio Cinecittà,
he nationalised the entire film industry and tried to create a fascist Hollywood.
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