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Both films succeed in trying to manipulate the audiences
political Weltanschauung by employing various innovative
cinematic techniques, such as bold editing and mesmerizing images that
linger seemingly forever on the screen (e.g., the endless National Socialist
parades in TRIUMPH OF THE WILL). One has to understand, though, that
National Socialism and Communism were almost diametrically opposed on
the contemporary political spectrum. While National Socialism tried
to focus on the betterment of the Nordic race, Communism tried to encompass
all of humanity. |
Richard Taylor argues that almost no film exists of the October Revolution. The Soviets were able to use this fact to their advantage. They started to establish a basis of historical legitimacy for their regime and the absence of adequate documentary evidence gave Soviet film makers a golden opportunity for the re-creation of the realities of Russian history, and for some improvement on them. (Taylor 93) This, of course, means that the Soviets did nothing more than glorify the construction of their Bolshevist state. They were able to do so because they had total control of the media (it was, after all, a totalitarian regime). By employing such a famous director as Eisenstein they
gave themselves double credit; one for |
It seems quite apparent that, while OCTOBER is a
symbol for the artists unison with his time (Zorkaya 69),
the film is also a big lie in the sense that it does not represent what
was in actuality transpiring during the October Revolution. On the contrary,
the film is a mere representation of the fact. OCTOBER is dedicated
to the tenth anniversary of the Revolution, thereby degrading itself
to On the other hand, when once compares OCTOBER with TRIUMPH
OF THE WILL, it becomes soon clear that the latter is the superior of
the two films. TRIUMPH OF THE WILL is not a recreation of actual events,
but rather a documentary (albeit a rather propagandistic one) of the
events themselves. Leni Riefenstahl was commissioned by Adolf Hitler
himself to make a documentary about the Party Rally in Nuremberg (1934).
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According to Robert Gardner (who interviewed Riefenstahl), she was at first reluctant to make the film because she knew nothing about the Party or its organization. (Hull 74) Riefenstahl also insisted that the film should be financed by her rather than the Party. All the circumstances mentioned above are good indicators that TRIUMPH OF THE WILL is, in essence at least, less propagandistic than OCTOBER.
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According to Taylor, Leni Riefenstahl claimed in an
interview that Everything (in TRIUMPH OF THE WILL) is real. And
there is no tendentious commentary for the simple reason that the film
has no commentary at all. It is history. A purely historical film.
(Taylor 189) This is certainly not true of OCTOBER. Bizarrely enough,
according to Taylor, the very absence of documentary material
(on the October Revolution)
has
meant that subsequent historians
and film makers have turned to |
Works Cited Hull, David Stewart. Film in the Third Reich. Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1969. Kracauer, Siegfried. From Caligari to Hitler. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1974. Pudovkin, V. Soviet Films: Principal Stages of Development. Bombay: Peoples Publishing House, 1950. Taylor, Richard. Film Propaganda: Soviet Russia and Nazi Germany. New York: Barnes & Noble Books, 1979. Zorkaya, Neya. The Illustrated History of the Soviet Cinema. New York: Hippocrene Books, 1989. |
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Posted by New Nation News Views expressed not necessarily those of NNN and vice-versa but presented as a public service for review. |