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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.
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 ...
German Concentration Camps Factual Survey is the official British documentary film on the Nazi concentration camps, based on footage shot by the Allied forces in 1945. [ 3 ] The film was produced by Sidney Bernstein , then with the British Ministry of Information , [ 4 ] with Alfred Hitchcock acting as a "treatment advisor".
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.
Pages in category "Documentary films about Nazi Germany" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
A British Army bulldozer pushes bodies into a mass grave at Belsen, April 19, 1945.. The film opens with a note that the following is "a reminder that behind the curtain of Nazi pageants and parades was millions of men, women and children who were tortured to death – the greatest mass murder in human history," then fades into German civilians at Gardelegen carrying crosses to the local ...
While some of them are popular only within the Neo-Nazi subculture, comedies starring Heinz Rühmann rank among the favourites of all Germans, and the propaganda films of Leni Riefenstahl have been influential, though controversial. A total of 1,084 feature films were shown in cinemas in Nazi Germany. [1]