Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The German Monthly Show; newsreel series Die Deutsche Wochenschau: The German Weekly Show; newsreel series Deutscher Sport im Kriegsjahr: Produced by IG Farben: Echo der Heimat: Die Frontschau: Fritz Hippler: The Front Show; Series of technical films shown to soldiers before they were sent to the Eastern Front: Junges Europa: Panorama
This page was last edited on 15 February 2024, at 11:59 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
English. Read; Edit; View history; Tools. ... Nazi World War II propaganda films ... (2 P) W. German World War I films (28 P) German World War II films (1 C, 93 P)
Titanic is a 1943 German propaganda film made during World War II in Berlin by Tobis Productions for UFA, depicting the catastrophic sinking of RMS Titanic in 1912. This was the third German language dramatization of the event, following a silent film released in 1912 just four months after the sinking and the British produced German film Atlantik released in 1929.
The film or miniseries must be concerned with World War II (or the War of Ethiopia and the Sino-Japanese War) and include events which feature as a part of the war effort. For short films, see the List of World War II short films. For documentaries, see the List of World War II documentary films and the List of Allied propaganda films of World ...
A Special Edition was released in 2007. Both are in German only. The Bridge/Die Brücke was released on DVD in the UK, by Digital Classics DVD, on 19 October 2009 with English subtitles and a bonus film about director Bernhard Wicki. The film was issued in the US in June 2015 on Blu-ray and DVD by The Criterion Collection.
One of the last films of the Third Reich, it was intended to bolster the will of the German population to resist the Allies. Harlan and Alfred Braun, who also worked on the screenplay, based the film on the autobiography of Joachim Nettelbeck [de; pl], mayor of Kolberg in Pomerania, and on Paul Heyse's later play adapted from the book. (Joseph ...
Homecoming (German: Heimkehr) is a 1941 Nazi German anti-Polish propaganda film directed by Gustav Ucicky. [1] Filled with heavy-handed caricature, it justifies extermination of Poles with a depiction of relentless persecution of ethnic Germans, who escape death only because of the German invasion.