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Dasein ohne Leben – Psychiatrie und Menschlichkeit (Existence Without Life – Psychiatry and Humanity) is a 1942 Nazi propaganda film [1] about the physically and mentally disabled. The film labeled inherited mental illness as a threat to public health and society, and called for extermination of those affected.
Drama film: Veit Harlan: Otto Gebühr: 12 June 1942: Die große Liebe: The Great Love: 100 min: Drama film: Walter Bolz for Universum Film AG: Rolf Hansen: Zarah Leander Viktor Staal: The most commercially successful film in the history of the Third Reich. 14 August 1942: G.P.U. The Red Terror: 99 min: Action film: Karl Ritter: Karl Ritter ...
Inside Nazi Germany at IMDb; Genzlinger, Neil, "'March of Time' Documentary Series Is Revisited"; The New York Times, September 2, 2010; on YouTube; Inside Nazi Germany at the Library of Congress "Movie of the Week: The March of Time — Inside Nazi Germany; Life, January 31, 1938
Documentary about Fredy Hirsch, a German Jew and openly gay man in Nazi Germany. The film combines interviews, archival materials, and animation. 2017 United States The Zookeeper's Wife: 2018 United States The Number on Great-Grandpa's Arm: Amy Schatz: The film features a conversation between a ten year old and his Grandfather, a Holocaust ...
Journey Into Life; Nazi film about 3 Merchant navy cadets. Feinde: Viktor Tourjansky: Enemies; Film justifying the German Invasion of Poland: Falstaff in Vienna: Leopold Hainisch: Hans Nielsen, Gusti Wolf, Wolf Albach-Retty: Musical comedy Feldzug in Polen: Fritz Hippler: Campaign in Poland; documentary propaganda film about the 1939 invasion ...
The Reich Cinema Law, enacted on 1 March 1934, required all film scripts to be approved by a Nazi film advisor. [22] Hans Hinkel was tasked by Goebbels with removing all Jewish influence from the film industry. [23] Weimar-era films which had Jewish people involved in the production were renamed and had those people removed from the credits.
The Nazi officer made commandant of the concentration camp, Rudolf Höss, brought the motto Arbeit Macht Frei - works sets you free - from another camp where he had worked, at Dachau in Germany.
This film was commissioned by Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels at the suggestion of Dr. Karl Brandt, to bolster public support for the Aktion T4 euthanasia program. [8] Key scenes from the film were personally inserted by Brack, one of the prominent organisers of the program and later a convicted war criminal.