Wort und Tat
Wort und Tat | |
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Directed by | Fritz Hippler |
Release dates |
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Running time | 10 minutes |
Country | Nazi Germany |
Language | German |
Wort und Tat (English: Words and Deeds) is a 10-minute-long Nazi propaganda film directed by Fritz Hippler, among others. It was released in 1938.
The film is notable for the extensive use of montage to get its message across, in a style reminiscent of Sergei Eisensteins Oktober.
The film begins with a montage of clips from the Weimar period, showing a series of clips of Labor and Communist rallies, interspersed with scenes of scantily clad cabaret girls, and then shots of the posters of the different Weimar era political parties. this illustrates the "chaos" and "decadence" of the Weimar period. This sequence ends with former chancellor Heinrich BrĂ¼ning making a speech against National Socialism.
The film then goes into a series of sequences showing how Nazi rule has improved various aspects of German life:
(in approximate order)
- Agricultural production (with scenes of the Reich Labor Service at work)
- Improvement of youth (Hitler Youth scenes)
- Coal production
- Autobahn construction
- The Winter health Campaign
- Steel production
- Factories being built
Then the film shifts to a scene of Mussolini praising the German development (in German), and various shots of the SS marching and the Luftwaffe flying in formation (which seems to have been lifted from Tag der Freiheit: Unsere Wehrmacht).
See also
External links
- Wort und Tat at the Internet Movie Database
- Wort und Tat on the Internet Archive.
Preceded by none |
Hippler Propaganda films Wort und Tat (1938) |
Succeeded by Der Westwall (1939) |