Apr 19, 2011

Before & After: Triumph Des Willens & The True Glory

Two documentaries, two countries and two periods of time tell very different and interesting stories about one central theme: Adolf Hitler's regime.

"Twenty years after the outbreak of the World War, sixteen years after the beginning of German suffering, nineteen months since the start of Germany's rebirth, Adolf Hitler flies to Nuremburg to review his faithful followers." ~Opening statement of Triumph Des Willens

Triumph Des Willens or Triumph of the Will was released in 1935, directed by Leni Riefenstahl is the infamous documentary which followed Hitler through many public events in the 1934 Nazi Party congress, which took place in Nuremburg. Being commissioned by Hitler himself, it was artfully crafted to portray all the splendor of the Nazi party and its leader and remains of the best examples of propaganda on film. Riefenstahl's cinematography alone is an amazing feat, especially for the time. However, it is the way in which she edited shots together, such as the young concentrating Hitler's youth drumming in line, up to the Furher's approving face, which were techniques used to sway the public in believeing in the good of the party. With a constant patriotic orchestra supporting these images, Triumph des Willens shows the world a new side of Germany, proud, strong and full of promise, rising out of the depression caused by World War I.

Riefenstahl's film became world reknown for the
beautiful shots and optimistic content for its country and won many awards in Germany as well as around the world-including the United States. What everyone seemed to lack in regards to this film was foresight. That is of course until second World War began, when Triumph Des Willens was banned by the Allies for being a product of the enemy.



"It is the story of the Nazi defeat on the western front. So far as possible, the editors have made it an account of the really important men in this campaign. I mean the enlisted soldiers, sailors and airmen that fought through every obstacle to victory. Of course to tell the whole story would take years, but the theme would be the same: Teamwork wins wars..." ~ Opening quote of The True Glory, spoken by Eisenhower.

The True Glory was released after the end of the war in 1945 as a collaboration between the British Ministry of Information and United States Office of War Information. Carol Reed, who had yet to direct The Third Man (1949) starring Orson Welles, was given the title of director for this film. However the term "orchestrator" might be more fitting, since it was hundreds of different pieces of documented footage edited together to create a comprehensible account of the Allies' invasion to the Nazi's defeat.

It essentially is the antithesis of Triumph Des Willens, as the footage was not shot for art or propaganda. It was shot by hundreds of different people, on both sides, with the single motive of recording what was happening before them. It therefore lacks the pre-conceived cinematography and quality of Riefenstahl's images. In that regard it is a trust-worthy account of warfare and serves to show the horrorifying results of the Nazi's regime. It ends with the discovery footage of the concentration camps, as people throw hundreds of starved, naked corpses into pits, and footage of cities made of rubble. To depict the information of the Allies' journey, maps segment different significant events on which shadowy swastikas are chased away by the Allies' flags. With added narration of dozens of men and women who tell anecdotes of their war experiences (most likely actors), The True Glory obviously takes a slant towards Ally patriotism. However, it is hardly anything to protest, especially when compared to Hitler's Aryan-idealized, swastika-filled propaganda masterpiece.


Apr 6, 2011

Bloody Sam (Whether He Likes It Or Not): Peckinpah's Tumultuous World


Cross of Iron starring James Coburn

Gratuitously violent, misogynistic, tactless, fascistic and other such condemnable labels have constantly surrounded Peckinpah’s controversial body of work, stemming from the 1960s New Hollywood movement. However I chose Peckinpah in spite of all negative critiques because I not only believe that such critiques for the most part misinterpret his work, but also I believe he is one of the most intimate auteurs in cinematic history. His films reflect uniquely heavy, personal viewpoints through central themes, character interaction and film techniques in a way which isn’t readily perceivable in many other director’s filmographies. However, in light of his outlandish personal life, I believe a lot of it tends to be ignored.

Intimate might now be a word which connotes “Bloody” Sam, as his films tend to focus on dirty, tight-lipped men, who have a disdain for social regulation and whose lives innately revolve around violence. However, it is the way in which these characters react to their surroundings which reveals Peckinpah’s troubled emotional core.
His themes, which are notorious in his popular revisionist Western films, stretch across many genres. From Major Dundee (1965), a civil war Western, to Convoy (1978), a modern campy action-comedy, the plots revolve around a tight-knit brotherhood, which is somehow breached-either by betrayal from within the group, or invasion from an outside source. This breach can be depicted as a rift in friendship, such as Locken and Hansen in the Killer Elite (1975) or a rift in marriage such as David and Amy Sumner in Straw Dogs (1971). Or it can be portrayed as the intrusion of an enemy into the group, such as the aristocratic Capt. Stransky who attempts to control Cpl. Steiner’s platoon in Cross of Iron (1977), which is my personal favorite of his films.