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  1. The Reich Chamber of Film (Reichsfilmkammer, abbreviated as RFK) was a government agency which operated as a statutory corporation controlled by the Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda that regulated the film industry in Nazi Germany between 1933 and 1945.

  2. The chilling, little-known story of the rise of Nazism in Los Angeles, and the Jewish leaders and spies they recruited who stopped it. No American city was more important to the Nazis than Los...

  3. January 1935 saw the final exclusion of "Non-Aryans" from the Reich Chamber of Film. By that point, the majority of affected filmmakers had already left Nazi Germany. A New Start in Dire Straits. The forced exile meant making a new, uncertain start in a foreign country.

  4. The authorities and NSDAP departments in charge of film policy were the film department of the Ministry of Propaganda, the Chamber of Culture (Reichskulturkammer), the Chamber of Film (Reichsfilmkammer), and the film department of the Party Propaganda Department (Reichspropagandaleitung).

  5. The Reich Chamber of Film (RFK) was one of the key implements of control for National-Socialist film policy. It was established in July 1933, only a few months after the Nazis took power, by means of a "Law for the Establishment of a Provisional Chamber of Film": one of the new government's first important institutions.

  6. Aug 8, 2012 · Its archival collections include contracts signed by the games' organizing committee and transcripts of interviews that Los Angeles Times reporter Ken Reich conducted during his extensive coverage of the 1984 games.

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  8. The Nazis' vision was for a German film industry excluding everyone considered a political enemy — and/or anyone fitting their anti-Semitic, racist, and nationalist profiling. Furthermore, as a state-run enterprise, the film industry was to be the tool of the National-Socialist leadership.

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