Search results
Aug 14, 2017 · In the hours following the Unite the Right white supremacist rally in Charlottesvillein August of 2017, a short propaganda film called Don’t Be a Sucker, first produced in 1943 by the...
- If You're Not Resisting, You're Partaking
What "America First" meant when it was used during the WWII...
- Donald Trump Refuses to Name The Problem of White Supremacist Violence
Trump took a tangent in the middle of his remarks, bragging...
- If You're Not Resisting, You're Partaking
In the fall of 1944, Nazi authorities ordered the creation of a propaganda film in Theresienstadt, a ghetto and concentration camp in the German-occupied region of the former Czechoslovakia. 1 The film—a portion of which is featured here—seemed to show Jewish prisoners happy and thriving.
- August 1944 to 1945
- 60.0269
- 00:07:31
- US Holocaust Memorial Museum
List of Nazi propaganda films. The following is a list of German National Socialist propaganda films. Before and during the Second World War, the Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda under Joseph Goebbels produced several propaganda films designed for the general public.
Release DateOriginal TitleEnglish TitleRunning Time1927A Symphony of the Will to Fight30 min (ca.)1929The Nuremberg Convention of the NSDAP90 min (ca.)June 14, 1933Storm Trooper Brand94 minSeptember 19, 1933Hitler Youth Quex Our Flag Leads Us ...95 minThe films span a range of genres, with documentary films including footage filmed both by the Germans for propaganda and by the Allies, compilations, survivor accounts and docudramas, and narrative films including war films, action films, love stories, psychological dramas, and even comedies.
YearCountryTitleDirector1940United Kingdom1940United States1940United States1942United StatesAug 2, 2016 · Propaganda at the Movies. Learn how the Nazis used film to create an image of the “national community” and to demonize those they viewed as the enemy, such as the Jews. Last Updated: August 2, 2016.
Dec 24, 2016 · of the Jews, the films continued to adhere to the wartime government and industry guidelines for how American movies should depict Nazi Germany and its wrong doing. From its inception in 1930, the film industry's internal censorship board, the Production Code Administration (PCA), stipulated that filmmakers should portray
To learn more about how the Nazi regime attempted to build public support for the Nazi program through the use of seemingly positive propaganda, see the Experiencing History collection, Nazi Propaganda and National Unity.