fbpx
Wikipedia

Triumph of the Will

Triumph of the Will (German: Triumph des Willens) is a 1935 German Nazi propaganda film directed, produced, edited and co-written by Leni Riefenstahl. Adolf Hitler commissioned the film and served as an unofficial executive producer; his name appears in the opening titles. It chronicles the 1934 Nazi Party Congress in Nuremberg, which was attended by more than 700,000 Nazi supporters.[1] The film contains excerpts of speeches given by Nazi leaders at the Congress, including Hitler, Rudolf Hess and Julius Streicher, interspersed with footage of massed Sturmabteilung (SA) and Schutzstaffel (SS) troops and public reaction. Its overriding theme is the return of Germany as a great power with Hitler as its leader. The film was produced after the Night of the Long Knives, and many formerly prominent SA members are absent.

Triumph of the Will
German theatrical poster
Directed byLeni Riefenstahl
Written by
Produced byLeni Riefenstahl
Starring
Cinematography
Edited byLeni Riefenstahl (uncredited)
Music byHerbert Windt
Production
company
Reichsparteitag-Film
Distributed byUFA
Release date
  • 28 March 1935 (1935-03-28)
Running time
114 minutes
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman

Following its release in March 1935, it became a major example of film used as propaganda and was well-received at home. Riefenstahl's techniques—such as moving cameras, aerial photography, the use of long-focus lenses to create a distorted perspective, and the revolutionary approach to the use of music and cinematography—have earned Triumph of the Will recognition as one of the greatest propaganda films in history. It won several awards in Germany, France and Italy.[2]

During World War II, Frank Capra's seven-film series Why We Fight was directly inspired by Triumph of the Will and the United States' response to it.[3] In present-day Germany, the film is not censored but the courts commonly classify it as Nazi propaganda, which requires an educational context for public screenings.[4] The film continues to influence films, documentaries and commercials to this day.[5]

Synopsis edit

The film begins with a prologue establishing the present-day as 5 September 1934 and the elapsed time since World War I, the Treaty of Versailles, Hitler's appointment as chancellor, climaxing in his visit to Nuremberg on that day. It is the only commentary in the entire film.

Day 1: The film opens with shots of the clouds above the city, and then moves through the clouds to float above the assembling masses below, with the intention of portraying beauty and majesty of the scene. The cruciform shadow of Hitler's plane is visible as it passes over the tiny figures marching below, accompanied by an orchestral arrangement of the Horst-Wessel-Lied. Upon arriving at the Nuremberg airport, Hitler and other Nazi leaders emerge from his plane to thunderous applause and a cheering crowd. He is then driven into Nuremberg, through equally enthusiastic people, to his hotel where a night rally is later held.

Day 2: The second day begins with images of Nuremberg at dawn, accompanied by an extract from the Act III Prelude (Wach Auf!) of Richard Wagner's Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg. Following this is a montage of the attendees preparing for the opening of the Reich Party Congress, and footage of the top Nazi officials arriving at the Luitpold Arena. The film then cuts to the opening ceremony, where Rudolf Hess announces the start of the Congress. The camera then introduces much of the Nazi hierarchy and covers their opening speeches, including Joseph Goebbels, Alfred Rosenberg, Hans Frank, Fritz Todt, Robert Ley and Julius Streicher. Then the film cuts to an outdoor rally for the Reichsarbeitsdienst (Labor Service), which is primarily a series of quasi-military drills by men carrying spades. This is also where Hitler gives his first speech on the merits of the Labour Service and praising them for their work in rebuilding Germany. The day then ends with a torchlight SA parade and fireworks display in which Viktor Lutze speaks to the crowds.

Day 3: The third day starts with a Hitler Youth rally on the parade ground. Again the camera covers the Nazi dignitaries arriving and the introduction of Hitler by Baldur von Schirach. Hitler then addresses the Youth, describing in militaristic terms how they must harden themselves and prepare for sacrifice. Everyone present, including General Werner von Blomberg, then assemble for a military pass and review, featuring Wehrmacht cavalry and various armored vehicles. That night Hitler delivers another speech to low-ranking party officials by torchlight, commemorating the first year since the Nazis took power and declaring that the party and state are one entity.

Day 4: The fourth day is the climax of the film, where the most memorable of the imagery is presented. Hitler, flanked by Heinrich Himmler and Viktor Lutze, walks through a long wide expanse with over 150,000 SA and SS troops standing at attention, to lay a wreath at a First World War memorial. Hitler then reviews the parading SA and SS men, following which Hitler and Lutze deliver a speech where they discuss the Night of the Long Knives purge of the SA several months prior. Lutze reaffirms the SA's loyalty to the regime, and Hitler absolves the SA of any crimes committed by Ernst Röhm. New party flags are consecrated by letting them touch the Blutfahne (the same cloth flag said to have been carried by the fallen Nazis during the Beer Hall Putsch) and, following a final parade in front of the Nuremberg Frauenkirche, Hitler delivers his closing speech. In it he reaffirms the primacy of the Nazi Party in Germany, declaring, "All loyal Germans will become National Socialists. Only the best National Socialists are party comrades!" Hess then leads the assembled crowd in a final Sieg Heil salute for Hitler, marking the close of the party congress. The entire crowd sings the Horst-Wessel-Lied as the camera focuses on the giant Swastika banner, which fades into a line of silhouetted men in Nazi party uniforms, marching in formation as the lyrics "Comrades shot by the Red Front and the Reactionaries march in spirit together in our columns" are sung.

Production edit

 
Hitler congratulates Riefenstahl in 1934.

Riefenstahl, a popular German actress, had directed her first film called Das blaue Licht (The Blue Light) in 1932.[6] Hitler was impressed with Das blaue Licht, and in 1933 asked her to direct a film about the Nazis' annual Nuremberg Rally, which became Der Sieg des Glaubens (The Victory of Faith).[7] Hitler chose Riefenstahl as he wanted the film as "artistically satisfying"[8] as possible to appeal to a non-political audience, but he also believed that propaganda must admit no element of doubt.[9]

The Victory of Faith faced numerous technical problems, including a lack of preparation (Riefenstahl reported having just a few days) and Hitler's apparent unease at being filmed.[10] Though the film apparently did well at the box office, it later became a serious embarrassment to the Nazis after SA Leader Ernst Röhm, who had a prominent role in the film, was executed during the Night of the Long Knives. All references to Röhm were ordered to be erased from German history, which included the destruction of all copies of The Victory of Faith. It was considered a lost film until a copy turned up in the 1980s in the German Democratic Republic's film archives.[11]

In April 1934, Riefenstahl was commissioned by Hitler to create a successor film to The Victory of Faith.[12] Riefenstahl however, remained focused on production of her own film Tiefland (which was released only in 1954), while fellow director Walter Ruttmann worked on the party film. Ruttmann's ideals departed significantly from The Victory of Faith and sought to reorient the focus of the film onto the history of the Nazi movement rather than Hitler himself.[13] Hitler visited the studio on 6 December 1934 and permanently removed Ruttmann from the project, leaving Riefenstahl in sole control of what would become Triumph des Willens (Triumph of the Will).[14]

Filming edit

 
Riefenstahl and her film crew in front of Hitler's car during a parade in Nuremberg

The film follows a script similar to The Victory of Faith which is evident when one sees both films side by side. For example, the city of Nuremberg scenes—even to the shot of a cat included in the city driving sequence in both films.[15] Furthermore, Herbert Windt reused much of his musical score for that film in Triumph des Willens, which he also scored. Riefenstahl shot Triumph of the Will on a budget of roughly 280,000 RM (approximately US$110,000 in 1934, $1.54 m in 2015).[16] With that said, there were extensive preparations facilitated by the cooperation of party members, the military, and vital help from high-ranking Nazis like Goebbels. As Susan Sontag observed, "The Rally was planned not only as a spectacular mass meeting, but as a spectacular propaganda film."[17]

Albert Speer, Hitler's personal architect, designed the set in Nuremberg and did most of the coordination for the event. Pits were dug in front of the speakers' platform so Riefenstahl could get the camera angles she wanted, and tracks were laid so that her cameramen could get traveling shots of the crowd. When rough cuts were not up to par, major party leaders and high-ranking public officials reenacted their speeches in a studio for her.[18]

Riefenstahl had the difficult task of condensing an estimated 61 hours of film into two hours.[19]

Reception edit

Triumph of the Will premiered on 28 March 1935 at the Berlin Ufa Palace Theater and was an instant success. Within two months the film had earned 815,000 Reichsmark (equivalent to 4 million 2021 euros), and Ufa considered it one of the three most profitable films of that year. Hitler praised the film as being an "incomparable glorification of the power and beauty of our Movement." For her efforts, Riefenstahl was rewarded with the German Film Prize (Deutscher Filmpreis), a gold medal at the 1935 Venice Biennale, and the Grand Prix at the 1937 World Exhibition in Paris. However, there were few claims that the film would result in a mass influx of "converts" to fascism and the Nazis apparently did not make a serious effort to promote the film outside of Germany. Film historian Richard Taylor also said that Triumph of the Will was not generally used for propaganda purposes inside Nazi Germany. The Independent wrote in 2003: "Triumph of the Will seduced many wise men and women, persuaded them to admire rather than to despise, and undoubtedly won the Nazis friends and allies all over the world."[20]

The reception in other countries was not always as enthusiastic. British documentarian Paul Rotha called it tedious, while others were repelled by its pro-Nazi sentiments. During World War II, Frank Capra helped to create a direct response, through the film series called Why We Fight, a series of newsreels commissioned by the United States government that spliced in footage from Triumph of the Will, but recontextualized it so that it promoted the cause of the Allies instead. Capra later remarked that Triumph of the Will "fired no gun, dropped no bombs. But as a psychological weapon aimed at destroying the will to resist, it was just as lethal."[21] Clips from Triumph of the Will were also used in an Allied propaganda short called General Adolph Takes Over,[22] set to the British dance tune "The Lambeth Walk". The legions of marching soldiers, as well as Hitler giving his Nazi salute, were made to look like wind-up dolls, dancing to the music. The Danish resistance used to take over cinemas and force the projectionist to show Swinging the Lambeth Walk (as it was also known); Erik Barrow has said: "The extraordinary risks were apparently felt justified by a moment of savage anti-Hitler ridicule."[23] Also during World War II, the poet Dylan Thomas wrote a screenplay for and narrated These Are The Men, a propaganda piece using Triumph of the Will footage to discredit Nazi leadership.[24]

One of the best ways to gauge the response to Triumph of the Will was the instant and lasting international fame it gave Riefenstahl. The Economist said it "sealed her reputation as the greatest female filmmaker of the 20th century."[25] For a director who made eight films, only two of which received significant coverage outside of Germany, Riefenstahl had unusually high name recognition for the remainder of her life, most of it stemming from Triumph of the Will. However, her career was also permanently damaged by this association. After the war, Riefenstahl was imprisoned by the Allies for four years[citation needed] for allegedly being a Nazi sympathizer and was permanently blacklisted by the film industry. When she died in 2003—sixty-eight years after the film's premiere—her obituary received significant coverage in many major publications, including the Associated Press,[26] The Wall Street Journal,[27] The New York Times,[28] and The Guardian,[29] most of which reaffirmed the importance of Triumph of the Will.

Ethical controversy edit

 
Julius Streicher in custody in 1945

Like American filmmaker D. W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation, Triumph of the Will has been criticized as a use of spectacular filmmaking to promote a profoundly unethical system. In her defense, Riefenstahl claimed that she was naïve about the Nazis when she made it and had no knowledge of Hitler's genocidal or antisemitic policies. She also pointed out that Triumph of the Will contains "not one single anti-semitic word", although it does contain a veiled comment by Julius Streicher that "a people that does not protect its racial purity will perish".

However, Roger Ebert has observed that for some, "the very absence of anti-semitism in Triumph of the Will looks like a calculation; excluding the central motif of almost all of Hitler's public speeches must have been a deliberate decision to make the film more efficient as propaganda."[30]

Riefenstahl said in 1964:

If you see this film again today you ascertain that it doesn't contain a single reconstructed scene. Everything in it is true. And it contains no tendentious commentary at all. It is history. A pure historical film ... it is film-vérité. It reflects the truth that was then in 1934, history. It is therefore a documentary. Not a propaganda film. Oh! I know very well what propaganda is. That consists of recreating events in order to illustrate a thesis, or, in the face of certain events, to let one thing go in order to accentuate another. I found myself, me, at the heart of an event which was the reality of a certain time and a certain place. My film is composed of what stemmed from that.[31]

However, Riefenstahl was an active participant in the rally, though in later years she downplayed her influence significantly, claiming, "I just observed and tried to film it well. The idea that I helped to plan it is downright absurd." Ebert states that Triumph of the Will is "by general consent [one] of the best documentaries ever made", but added that because it reflects the ideology of a movement regarded by many as evil, it poses "a classic question of the contest between art and morality: Is there such a thing as pure art, or does all art make a political statement?"[30] When reviewing the film for his "Great Movies" collection, Ebert reversed his opinion, characterizing his earlier conclusion as "the received opinion that the film is great but evil" and calling it "a terrible film, paralyzingly dull, simpleminded, overlong and not even 'manipulative', because it is too clumsy to manipulate anyone but a true believer".[32]

Writing in 1975, Susan Sontag considers Triumph of the Will the "most successful, most purely propagandistic film ever made, whose very conception negates the possibility of the filmmaker's having an aesthetic or visual conception independent of propaganda." Sontag points to Riefenstahl's involvement in the planning and design of the Nuremberg ceremonies as evidence that Riefenstahl was working as a propagandist, rather than as an artist in any sense of the word. With some 30 cameras and a crew of 150, the marches, parades, speeches, and processions were orchestrated like a movie set for Riefenstahl's film. Further, this was not the first political film made by Riefenstahl for the Nazis (there was Victory of Faith, 1933), nor was it the last (Day of Freedom, 1935, and Olympia, 1938). "Anyone who defends Riefenstahl's films as documentary", Sontag states, "if documentary is to be distinguished from propaganda, is being disingenuous. In Triumph of Will, the document (the image) is no longer simply the record of reality; 'reality' has been constructed to serve the image."[17] This is considerably different from the position she takes ten years earlier in a 1965 essay entitled "On Style," where she opposes the idea that Riefenstahl's propaganda films are purely propaganda, and writes: "To call Leni Riefenstahl's The Triumph of the Will and The Olympiad masterpieces is not to gloss over Nazi propaganda with aesthetic lenience. The Nazi propaganda is there. But something else is there, too, which we reject at our loss. Because they project the complex movements of intelligence and grace and sensuousness, these two films of Riefenstahl (unique among works of Nazi artists) transcend the categories of propaganda or even reportage. And we find ourselves—to be sure, rather uncomfortably—seeing 'Hitler' and not Hitler, the '1936 Olympics' and not the 1936 Olympics. Through Riefenstahl's genius as a film-maker, the 'content' has—let us even assume, against her intentions—come to play a purely formal role."[33]

Influences and legacy edit

 
Charlie Chaplin as Adenoid Hynkel in The Great Dictator

Triumph of the Will remains well known for its striking visuals. As one historian notes, "many of the most enduring images of the [Nazi] regime and its leader derive from Riefenstahl's film."[34]

Extensive excerpts of the film were used in Erwin Leiser's documentary Mein Kampf, produced in Sweden in 1960. Riefenstahl unsuccessfully sued the Swedish production company Minerva-Film for copyright violation, although she did receive forty thousand marks in compensation from German and Austrian distributors of the film.[35]

Schichlegruber - Doing the Lambeth Walk or Lambeth Walk – Nazi Style, a short propaganda film made in 1942 by Charles A. Ridley of the British Ministry of Information editing clips from Triumph of the Will to make appear as if Hitler and other Nazis were marching to The Lambeth Walk, a dance craze that the Nazis despised

In 1942, Charles A. Ridley of the British Ministry of Information made a short propaganda film called among other names Schichlegruber - Doing the Lambeth Walk and Lambeth Walk – Nazi Style, which edited footage of Hitler and German soldiers from the film to make it appear they were marching and dancing to the song "The Lambeth Walk".[note 1] The targeted-at-Nazis parody of "The Lambeth Walk" (a British dance that had been popular in swing clubs in Germany was denounced by the Nazis as "Jewish mischief and animalistic hopping"[36]). The propaganda film was distributed uncredited to newsreel companies, who would supply their own narration.[37]

Charlie Chaplin's satire The Great Dictator (1940) was inspired in large part by Triumph of the Will.[38] Frank Capra used significant footage, with a mocking narration in the first installment of the propagandistic film produced by the United States Army Why We Fight as an exposure of Nazi militarism and totalitarianism to American soldiers and sailors.[39]

Copyright edit

Germany edit

Riefenstahl filed lawsuits against two postwar documentaries which had incorporated footage of Triumph of the Will. The first lawsuit occurred in 1954 against Wolfgang Hartwig, producer of Bis fünf nach zwölf. Hartwig argued that the rights belonged to the state, but reportedly eventually paid compensation to Riefenstahl, who donated it to a charity dedicated to returning prisoners of war.[40] Her second lawsuit against Swedish producer Erwin Leiser's Mein Kampf in 1960 was enveloped in greater public debate about the copyright and morality of works produced during the Nazi regime.[41] The case was settled against her in 1969.[42]

In a judgement by the Federal Court of Justice on 29 December 1966, the copyright to the film was transferred to the Federal Republic of Germany as the legal successor of Nazi Germany.[43] These rights are administered by the federally owned Transit-Film GmbH based in Munich, although it was contractually regulated in 1974 that any public screening until 2004 had to be approved by Riefenstahl and that she received 70% of all revenues.[44]

United States edit

In 1996, the copyrights of the film were restored to Riefenstahl under the Uruguay Round Agreements Act,[45] although some aspect of the US copyrights are uncertain.[46]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ See § External links for video

References edit

  1. ^ Barsam, Richard M (1975). Filmguide to Triumph of the Will. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. p. 21.
  2. ^ Rother 2003, p. 71.
  3. ^ Hagopian, Kevin Jack. "Triumph of the Will – Film Notes". New York Writers Institute. University of Albany."When director Frank Capra was commissioned by the U.S. government to make what became the Why We Fight series of propaganda films in World War II, he screened a copy of Triumph of the Will which had been setd by the U.S. Customs office."
  4. ^ Julia Jacobs, Philipp Schepp: "Triumph des Willens". In: Thomas Hoeren, Lena Meyer: Verbotene Filme. Berlin 2007, p. 177. (In German.)
  5. ^ Hinton, David B. (1975). "Triumph of the Will: Document or Artifice?". Cinema Journal. University of Texas Press. 15 (1): 48–57. doi:10.2307/1225104. JSTOR 1225104.
  6. ^ Rother 2003, p. 35.
  7. ^ Rother 2003, p. 51.
  8. ^ Starkman, R (1998). "Mother of All Spectacles: Ray Müller's "The Wonderful, Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl"". Film Quarterly. University of California. 51 (2 Winter, 1997–1998): 23. doi:10.2307/3697138. JSTOR 3697138.(subscription required)
  9. ^ Hitler, Adolph (2000). "War Propaganda". In Marwick, A; Simpson, W (eds.). Primary Sources 2: Interwar and World War II. Milton Keynes, The Open University. pp. 79–82. ISBN 0-7492-8559-1.
  10. ^ Rother 2003, p. 55.
  11. ^ Trimborn, Jürgen (2008). Leni Riefenstahl: A Life. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-1-4668-2164-4. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  12. ^ Rother 2003, p. 61.
  13. ^ Rother 2003, p. 62.
  14. ^ Rother 2003, p. 63.
  15. ^ Rother 2003, p. 58.
  16. ^ Barsam, Richard. "Filmguide to Triumph of the Will" (PDF). Retrieved 28 February 2015.
  17. ^ a b Sontag, Susan (6 February 1975). "Fascinating Fascism". The New York Review of Books.
  18. ^ Berenbaum, Michael (2007). The World Must Know: The History of the Holocaust as Told in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Washington, D.C.: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 24–25. ISBN 978-0-316-09134-3.
  19. ^ "A perfect eye for mythology of the Nazis". The Sydney Morning Herald. 13 September 2003. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  20. ^ Williams, Val (10 September 2003). . Obituaries. The Independent. p. xx. Archived from the original on 30 August 2009.
  21. ^ Capra, Frank (1977). The Name above the Title: An Autobiography. Da Capo Press. p. 328. ISBN 0-306-80771-8. Retrieved 6 May 2012.
  22. ^ "Lambeth Walk – Nazi Style (1942)". The Public Domain Review. Retrieved 22 January 2019.
  23. ^ Barrow, Erik (1993). Documentary: A History of Non-fiction Films. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 151. ISBN 0-19-507898-5.
  24. ^ "Into Battle No. 4: These are the Men". Indiana University Bloomington. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  25. ^ "Leni Riefenstahl: Hand-held history". The Economist. 11 September 2003.
  26. ^ Rising, David (9 September 2003). "Hitler's filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl, revered and reviled for her work, dies at 101". Associated Press.
  27. ^ Petropolous, Jonathan (11 September 2003). "Leni Riefenstahl, Coy Propagandist of the Nazi Era". The Wall Street Journal.
  28. ^ Riding, Alan (9 September 2003). "Leni Riefenstahl, Filmmaker and Nazi Propagandist, Dies at 101". The New York Times.
  29. ^ Harding, Luke (10 September 2003). "Leni Riefenstahl, Hitler's favourite film propagandist, dies at 101". The Guardian.
  30. ^ a b Ebert, Roger (24 June 1994). "The Wonderful Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl". Chicago Sun-Times.
  31. ^ Thomson, David (2010). The New Biographical Dictionary of Film, Fifth Edition. New York: Knopf. p. 822. ISBN 978-0-307-27174-7.
  32. ^ Ebert, Roger (26 June 2008). . Chicago Sun-Times. Archived from the original on 6 April 2011. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
  33. ^ Susan Sontag, "On Style," in Against Interpretation and Other Essays (New York: Dell Publishing Company/Laurel, 1969 [originally published by Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1966]) pp. 34-35. In the 1969 paperback edition, she observes that she does not necessarily agree with all the positions expressed in the book's essays, though "when I wrote them, I believed what I wrote" (p. 6).
  34. ^ Reeves, Nicholas (2003) [1999]. The Power of Film Propaganda: Myth or Reality?. London; New York: Continuum. p. 107. ISBN 0-82647-390-3.
  35. ^ Trimborn, Jürgen (2007). Leni Riefenstahl: A Life. New York: Faber and Faber. p. 240. ISBN 9780374184933.
  36. ^ "Nazis Hold Lambeth Walk is 'Animalistic Hopping'", The New York Times January 8, 1939, p. 26
  37. ^ "The Goofy, Anti-Nazi Parody Video That Enraged Goebbels". Slate magazine. 9 February 2016.
  38. ^ Trimborn, pp. 123–124.
  39. ^ Rollins, Peter C (ed.). (2003) “Indoctrination and Propaganda, 1942–1945” The Columbia companion to American history on film: How the movies have portrayed the American past. Columbia University Press. pp. 118.
  40. ^ Rother 2003, p. 148.
  41. ^ Rother 2003, p. 150.
  42. ^ Rother 2003, p. 149.
  43. ^ Meyer 2007, p. 179.
  44. ^ Meyer 2007, p. 184.
  45. ^ "Copyright Restoration of Works in Accordance With the Uruguay Round Agreements Act; Notice". Federal Register. 61: 46133–46159. 30 August 1996.
  46. ^ Pessach, Guy; Shur-Ofry, Michal (28 April 2019). "Copyright and the Holocaust". Yale Journal of Law & the Humanities. 30 (2): 9. ISSN 1041-6374. Retrieved 4 July 2020. (note 37)

Works cited edit

  • Rother, Rainer (1 October 2003). Leni Riefenstahl: The Seduction of Genius. A&C Black. ISBN 9780826470232.
  • Meyer, Lena (2007). Verbotene Filme (in German). Berlin: LIT Verlag Münster. ISBN 9783825801434.

Further reading edit

  • Cheshire, Ellen (2000). . Kamera. Archived from the original on 17 December 2005.
  • Kershaw, Ian (1987). The Hitler Myth. Oxford, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 48–49. ISBN 0-19-821964-4.
  • Shirer, William. Berlin Diary: The Journal of a Foreign Correspondent 1934–1941. New York, Alfred A. Knopf, 1941. Includes a contemporary account of the 1934 Nuremberg rally.
  • Smith, David Calvert (1990). . Richardson, TX: Celluloid Chronicles Press. Archived from the original on 20 February 2002. (Complete screenplay.)
  • Welch, David (1993). The Third Reich Politics and Propaganda. New Fetter Lane, London: Routledge. pp. 65–72. ISBN 0-415-09033-4.

External links edit

  • , the original Riefenstahl website
  • , DasBlaueLicht.net
  • Hinter den Kulissen des Reichsparteitag-Films, Riefenstahl's 1935 book on the making of the film with many photographs (in German)
  • Triumph of the Will at IMDb  
  • Triumph of the Will at Rotten Tomatoes  

triumph, will, this, article, about, nazi, propaganda, film, canadian, television, series, kenny, hotz, german, triumph, willens, 1935, german, nazi, propaganda, film, directed, produced, edited, written, leni, riefenstahl, adolf, hitler, commissioned, film, s. This article is about the Nazi propaganda film For the Canadian television series see Kenny Hotz s Triumph of the Will Triumph of the Will German Triumph des Willens is a 1935 German Nazi propaganda film directed produced edited and co written by Leni Riefenstahl Adolf Hitler commissioned the film and served as an unofficial executive producer his name appears in the opening titles It chronicles the 1934 Nazi Party Congress in Nuremberg which was attended by more than 700 000 Nazi supporters 1 The film contains excerpts of speeches given by Nazi leaders at the Congress including Hitler Rudolf Hess and Julius Streicher interspersed with footage of massed Sturmabteilung SA and Schutzstaffel SS troops and public reaction Its overriding theme is the return of Germany as a great power with Hitler as its leader The film was produced after the Night of the Long Knives and many formerly prominent SA members are absent Triumph of the WillGerman theatrical posterDirected byLeni RiefenstahlWritten byLeni Riefenstahl Walter Ruttmann Eberhard TaubertProduced byLeni RiefenstahlStarringAdolf Hitler Heinrich Himmler Viktor Lutze Hermann Goring Max Amann Martin Bormann Walter Buch Richard Walther Darre Otto Dietrich Sepp Dietrich Hans Frank Joseph Goebbels Jakob Grimminger Rudolf Hess Reinhard Heydrich Konstantin Hierl Franz Hofer Robert LeyCinematographySepp Allgeier Franz WeihmayrEdited byLeni Riefenstahl uncredited Music byHerbert WindtProductioncompanyReichsparteitag FilmDistributed byUFARelease date28 March 1935 1935 03 28 Running time114 minutesCountryGermanyLanguageGermanFollowing its release in March 1935 it became a major example of film used as propaganda and was well received at home Riefenstahl s techniques such as moving cameras aerial photography the use of long focus lenses to create a distorted perspective and the revolutionary approach to the use of music and cinematography have earned Triumph of the Will recognition as one of the greatest propaganda films in history It won several awards in Germany France and Italy 2 During World War II Frank Capra s seven film series Why We Fight was directly inspired by Triumph of the Will and the United States response to it 3 In present day Germany the film is not censored but the courts commonly classify it as Nazi propaganda which requires an educational context for public screenings 4 The film continues to influence films documentaries and commercials to this day 5 Contents 1 Synopsis 2 Production 2 1 Filming 3 Reception 3 1 Ethical controversy 4 Influences and legacy 5 Copyright 5 1 Germany 5 2 United States 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Works cited 9 Further reading 10 External linksSynopsis editThe film begins with a prologue establishing the present day as 5 September 1934 and the elapsed time since World War I the Treaty of Versailles Hitler s appointment as chancellor climaxing in his visit to Nuremberg on that day It is the only commentary in the entire film Day 1 The film opens with shots of the clouds above the city and then moves through the clouds to float above the assembling masses below with the intention of portraying beauty and majesty of the scene The cruciform shadow of Hitler s plane is visible as it passes over the tiny figures marching below accompanied by an orchestral arrangement of the Horst Wessel Lied Upon arriving at the Nuremberg airport Hitler and other Nazi leaders emerge from his plane to thunderous applause and a cheering crowd He is then driven into Nuremberg through equally enthusiastic people to his hotel where a night rally is later held Day 2 The second day begins with images of Nuremberg at dawn accompanied by an extract from the Act III Prelude Wach Auf of Richard Wagner s Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg Following this is a montage of the attendees preparing for the opening of the Reich Party Congress and footage of the top Nazi officials arriving at the Luitpold Arena The film then cuts to the opening ceremony where Rudolf Hess announces the start of the Congress The camera then introduces much of the Nazi hierarchy and covers their opening speeches including Joseph Goebbels Alfred Rosenberg Hans Frank Fritz Todt Robert Ley and Julius Streicher Then the film cuts to an outdoor rally for the Reichsarbeitsdienst Labor Service which is primarily a series of quasi military drills by men carrying spades This is also where Hitler gives his first speech on the merits of the Labour Service and praising them for their work in rebuilding Germany The day then ends with a torchlight SA parade and fireworks display in which Viktor Lutze speaks to the crowds Day 3 The third day starts with a Hitler Youth rally on the parade ground Again the camera covers the Nazi dignitaries arriving and the introduction of Hitler by Baldur von Schirach Hitler then addresses the Youth describing in militaristic terms how they must harden themselves and prepare for sacrifice Everyone present including General Werner von Blomberg then assemble for a military pass and review featuring Wehrmacht cavalry and various armored vehicles That night Hitler delivers another speech to low ranking party officials by torchlight commemorating the first year since the Nazis took power and declaring that the party and state are one entity Day 4 The fourth day is the climax of the film where the most memorable of the imagery is presented Hitler flanked by Heinrich Himmler and Viktor Lutze walks through a long wide expanse with over 150 000 SA and SS troops standing at attention to lay a wreath at a First World War memorial Hitler then reviews the parading SA and SS men following which Hitler and Lutze deliver a speech where they discuss the Night of the Long Knives purge of the SA several months prior Lutze reaffirms the SA s loyalty to the regime and Hitler absolves the SA of any crimes committed by Ernst Rohm New party flags are consecrated by letting them touch the Blutfahne the same cloth flag said to have been carried by the fallen Nazis during the Beer Hall Putsch and following a final parade in front of the Nuremberg Frauenkirche Hitler delivers his closing speech In it he reaffirms the primacy of the Nazi Party in Germany declaring All loyal Germans will become National Socialists Only the best National Socialists are party comrades Hess then leads the assembled crowd in a final Sieg Heil salute for Hitler marking the close of the party congress The entire crowd sings the Horst Wessel Lied as the camera focuses on the giant Swastika banner which fades into a line of silhouetted men in Nazi party uniforms marching in formation as the lyrics Comrades shot by the Red Front and the Reactionaries march in spirit together in our columns are sung Production edit nbsp Hitler congratulates Riefenstahl in 1934 Riefenstahl a popular German actress had directed her first film called Das blaue Licht The Blue Light in 1932 6 Hitler was impressed with Das blaue Licht and in 1933 asked her to direct a film about the Nazis annual Nuremberg Rally which became Der Sieg des Glaubens The Victory of Faith 7 Hitler chose Riefenstahl as he wanted the film as artistically satisfying 8 as possible to appeal to a non political audience but he also believed that propaganda must admit no element of doubt 9 The Victory of Faith faced numerous technical problems including a lack of preparation Riefenstahl reported having just a few days and Hitler s apparent unease at being filmed 10 Though the film apparently did well at the box office it later became a serious embarrassment to the Nazis after SA Leader Ernst Rohm who had a prominent role in the film was executed during the Night of the Long Knives All references to Rohm were ordered to be erased from German history which included the destruction of all copies of The Victory of Faith It was considered a lost film until a copy turned up in the 1980s in the German Democratic Republic s film archives 11 In April 1934 Riefenstahl was commissioned by Hitler to create a successor film to The Victory of Faith 12 Riefenstahl however remained focused on production of her own film Tiefland which was released only in 1954 while fellow director Walter Ruttmann worked on the party film Ruttmann s ideals departed significantly from The Victory of Faith and sought to reorient the focus of the film onto the history of the Nazi movement rather than Hitler himself 13 Hitler visited the studio on 6 December 1934 and permanently removed Ruttmann from the project leaving Riefenstahl in sole control of what would become Triumph des Willens Triumph of the Will 14 Filming edit nbsp Riefenstahl and her film crew in front of Hitler s car during a parade in NurembergThe film follows a script similar to The Victory of Faith which is evident when one sees both films side by side For example the city of Nuremberg scenes even to the shot of a cat included in the city driving sequence in both films 15 Furthermore Herbert Windt reused much of his musical score for that film in Triumph des Willens which he also scored Riefenstahl shot Triumph of the Will on a budget of roughly 280 000 RM approximately US 110 000 in 1934 1 54 m in 2015 16 With that said there were extensive preparations facilitated by the cooperation of party members the military and vital help from high ranking Nazis like Goebbels As Susan Sontag observed The Rally was planned not only as a spectacular mass meeting but as a spectacular propaganda film 17 Albert Speer Hitler s personal architect designed the set in Nuremberg and did most of the coordination for the event Pits were dug in front of the speakers platform so Riefenstahl could get the camera angles she wanted and tracks were laid so that her cameramen could get traveling shots of the crowd When rough cuts were not up to par major party leaders and high ranking public officials reenacted their speeches in a studio for her 18 Riefenstahl had the difficult task of condensing an estimated 61 hours of film into two hours 19 Reception editTriumph of the Will premiered on 28 March 1935 at the Berlin Ufa Palace Theater and was an instant success Within two months the film had earned 815 000 Reichsmark equivalent to 4 million 2021 euros and Ufa considered it one of the three most profitable films of that year Hitler praised the film as being an incomparable glorification of the power and beauty of our Movement For her efforts Riefenstahl was rewarded with the German Film Prize Deutscher Filmpreis a gold medal at the 1935 Venice Biennale and the Grand Prix at the 1937 World Exhibition in Paris However there were few claims that the film would result in a mass influx of converts to fascism and the Nazis apparently did not make a serious effort to promote the film outside of Germany Film historian Richard Taylor also said that Triumph of the Will was not generally used for propaganda purposes inside Nazi Germany The Independent wrote in 2003 Triumph of the Will seduced many wise men and women persuaded them to admire rather than to despise and undoubtedly won the Nazis friends and allies all over the world 20 The reception in other countries was not always as enthusiastic British documentarian Paul Rotha called it tedious while others were repelled by its pro Nazi sentiments During World War II Frank Capra helped to create a direct response through the film series called Why We Fight a series of newsreels commissioned by the United States government that spliced in footage from Triumph of the Will but recontextualized it so that it promoted the cause of the Allies instead Capra later remarked that Triumph of the Will fired no gun dropped no bombs But as a psychological weapon aimed at destroying the will to resist it was just as lethal 21 Clips from Triumph of the Will were also used in an Allied propaganda short called General Adolph Takes Over 22 set to the British dance tune The Lambeth Walk The legions of marching soldiers as well as Hitler giving his Nazi salute were made to look like wind up dolls dancing to the music The Danish resistance used to take over cinemas and force the projectionist to show Swinging the Lambeth Walk as it was also known Erik Barrow has said The extraordinary risks were apparently felt justified by a moment of savage anti Hitler ridicule 23 Also during World War II the poet Dylan Thomas wrote a screenplay for and narrated These Are The Men a propaganda piece using Triumph of the Will footage to discredit Nazi leadership 24 One of the best ways to gauge the response to Triumph of the Will was the instant and lasting international fame it gave Riefenstahl The Economist said it sealed her reputation as the greatest female filmmaker of the 20th century 25 For a director who made eight films only two of which received significant coverage outside of Germany Riefenstahl had unusually high name recognition for the remainder of her life most of it stemming from Triumph of the Will However her career was also permanently damaged by this association After the war Riefenstahl was imprisoned by the Allies for four years citation needed for allegedly being a Nazi sympathizer and was permanently blacklisted by the film industry When she died in 2003 sixty eight years after the film s premiere her obituary received significant coverage in many major publications including the Associated Press 26 The Wall Street Journal 27 The New York Times 28 and The Guardian 29 most of which reaffirmed the importance of Triumph of the Will Ethical controversy edit nbsp Julius Streicher in custody in 1945Like American filmmaker D W Griffith s The Birth of a Nation Triumph of the Will has been criticized as a use of spectacular filmmaking to promote a profoundly unethical system In her defense Riefenstahl claimed that she was naive about the Nazis when she made it and had no knowledge of Hitler s genocidal or antisemitic policies She also pointed out that Triumph of the Will contains not one single anti semitic word although it does contain a veiled comment by Julius Streicher that a people that does not protect its racial purity will perish However Roger Ebert has observed that for some the very absence of anti semitism in Triumph of the Will looks like a calculation excluding the central motif of almost all of Hitler s public speeches must have been a deliberate decision to make the film more efficient as propaganda 30 Riefenstahl said in 1964 If you see this film again today you ascertain that it doesn t contain a single reconstructed scene Everything in it is true And it contains no tendentious commentary at all It is history A pure historical film it is film verite It reflects the truth that was then in 1934 history It is therefore a documentary Not a propaganda film Oh I know very well what propaganda is That consists of recreating events in order to illustrate a thesis or in the face of certain events to let one thing go in order to accentuate another I found myself me at the heart of an event which was the reality of a certain time and a certain place My film is composed of what stemmed from that 31 However Riefenstahl was an active participant in the rally though in later years she downplayed her influence significantly claiming I just observed and tried to film it well The idea that I helped to plan it is downright absurd Ebert states that Triumph of the Will is by general consent one of the best documentaries ever made but added that because it reflects the ideology of a movement regarded by many as evil it poses a classic question of the contest between art and morality Is there such a thing as pure art or does all art make a political statement 30 When reviewing the film for his Great Movies collection Ebert reversed his opinion characterizing his earlier conclusion as the received opinion that the film is great but evil and calling it a terrible film paralyzingly dull simpleminded overlong and not even manipulative because it is too clumsy to manipulate anyone but a true believer 32 Writing in 1975 Susan Sontag considers Triumph of the Will the most successful most purely propagandistic film ever made whose very conception negates the possibility of the filmmaker s having an aesthetic or visual conception independent of propaganda Sontag points to Riefenstahl s involvement in the planning and design of the Nuremberg ceremonies as evidence that Riefenstahl was working as a propagandist rather than as an artist in any sense of the word With some 30 cameras and a crew of 150 the marches parades speeches and processions were orchestrated like a movie set for Riefenstahl s film Further this was not the first political film made by Riefenstahl for the Nazis there was Victory of Faith 1933 nor was it the last Day of Freedom 1935 and Olympia 1938 Anyone who defends Riefenstahl s films as documentary Sontag states if documentary is to be distinguished from propaganda is being disingenuous In Triumph of Will the document the image is no longer simply the record of reality reality has been constructed to serve the image 17 This is considerably different from the position she takes ten years earlier in a 1965 essay entitled On Style where she opposes the idea that Riefenstahl s propaganda films are purely propaganda and writes To call Leni Riefenstahl s The Triumph of the Will and The Olympiad masterpieces is not to gloss over Nazi propaganda with aesthetic lenience The Nazi propaganda is there But something else is there too which we reject at our loss Because they project the complex movements of intelligence and grace and sensuousness these two films of Riefenstahl unique among works of Nazi artists transcend the categories of propaganda or even reportage And we find ourselves to be sure rather uncomfortably seeing Hitler and not Hitler the 1936 Olympics and not the 1936 Olympics Through Riefenstahl s genius as a film maker the content has let us even assume against her intentions come to play a purely formal role 33 Influences and legacy edit nbsp Charlie Chaplin as Adenoid Hynkel in The Great DictatorTriumph of the Will remains well known for its striking visuals As one historian notes many of the most enduring images of the Nazi regime and its leader derive from Riefenstahl s film 34 Extensive excerpts of the film were used in Erwin Leiser s documentary Mein Kampf produced in Sweden in 1960 Riefenstahl unsuccessfully sued the Swedish production company Minerva Film for copyright violation although she did receive forty thousand marks in compensation from German and Austrian distributors of the film 35 source source source source source source Schichlegruber Doing the Lambeth Walk or Lambeth Walk Nazi Style a short propaganda film made in 1942 by Charles A Ridley of the British Ministry of Information editing clips from Triumph of the Will to make appear as if Hitler and other Nazis were marching to The Lambeth Walk a dance craze that the Nazis despisedIn 1942 Charles A Ridley of the British Ministry of Information made a short propaganda film called among other names Schichlegruber Doing the Lambeth Walk and Lambeth Walk Nazi Style which edited footage of Hitler and German soldiers from the film to make it appear they were marching and dancing to the song The Lambeth Walk note 1 The targeted at Nazis parody of The Lambeth Walk a British dance that had been popular in swing clubs in Germany was denounced by the Nazis as Jewish mischief and animalistic hopping 36 The propaganda film was distributed uncredited to newsreel companies who would supply their own narration 37 Charlie Chaplin s satire The Great Dictator 1940 was inspired in large part by Triumph of the Will 38 Frank Capra used significant footage with a mocking narration in the first installment of the propagandistic film produced by the United States Army Why We Fight as an exposure of Nazi militarism and totalitarianism to American soldiers and sailors 39 Copyright editGermany edit Riefenstahl filed lawsuits against two postwar documentaries which had incorporated footage of Triumph of the Will The first lawsuit occurred in 1954 against Wolfgang Hartwig producer of Bis funf nach zwolf Hartwig argued that the rights belonged to the state but reportedly eventually paid compensation to Riefenstahl who donated it to a charity dedicated to returning prisoners of war 40 Her second lawsuit against Swedish producer Erwin Leiser s Mein Kampf in 1960 was enveloped in greater public debate about the copyright and morality of works produced during the Nazi regime 41 The case was settled against her in 1969 42 In a judgement by the Federal Court of Justice on 29 December 1966 the copyright to the film was transferred to the Federal Republic of Germany as the legal successor of Nazi Germany 43 These rights are administered by the federally owned Transit Film GmbH based in Munich although it was contractually regulated in 1974 that any public screening until 2004 had to be approved by Riefenstahl and that she received 70 of all revenues 44 United States edit In 1996 the copyrights of the film were restored to Riefenstahl under the Uruguay Round Agreements Act 45 although some aspect of the US copyrights are uncertain 46 See also editThe Birth of a Nation 1915 American film which inspired the second KKK s formation List of German films of 1933 1945 Nazism and cinemaNotes edit See External links for videoReferences edit Barsam Richard M 1975 Filmguide to Triumph of the Will Bloomington IN Indiana University Press p 21 Rother 2003 p 71 Hagopian Kevin Jack Triumph of the Will Film Notes New York Writers Institute University of Albany When director Frank Capra was commissioned by the U S government to make what became the Why We Fight series of propaganda films in World War II he screened a copy of Triumph of the Will which had been setd by the U S Customs office Julia Jacobs Philipp Schepp Triumph des Willens In Thomas Hoeren Lena Meyer Verbotene Filme Berlin 2007 p 177 In German Hinton David B 1975 Triumph of the Will Document or Artifice Cinema Journal University of Texas Press 15 1 48 57 doi 10 2307 1225104 JSTOR 1225104 Rother 2003 p 35 Rother 2003 p 51 Starkman R 1998 Mother of All Spectacles Ray Muller s The Wonderful Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl Film Quarterly University of California 51 2 Winter 1997 1998 23 doi 10 2307 3697138 JSTOR 3697138 subscription required Hitler Adolph 2000 War Propaganda In Marwick A Simpson W eds Primary Sources 2 Interwar and World War II Milton Keynes The Open University pp 79 82 ISBN 0 7492 8559 1 Rother 2003 p 55 Trimborn Jurgen 2008 Leni Riefenstahl A Life Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 1 4668 2164 4 Retrieved 12 April 2020 Rother 2003 p 61 Rother 2003 p 62 Rother 2003 p 63 Rother 2003 p 58 Barsam Richard Filmguide to Triumph of the Will PDF Retrieved 28 February 2015 a b Sontag Susan 6 February 1975 Fascinating Fascism The New York Review of Books Berenbaum Michael 2007 The World Must Know The History of the Holocaust as Told in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Washington D C United States Holocaust Memorial Museum pp 24 25 ISBN 978 0 316 09134 3 A perfect eye for mythology of the Nazis The Sydney Morning Herald 13 September 2003 Retrieved 10 September 2022 Williams Val 10 September 2003 Leni Riefenstahl Obituaries The Independent p xx Archived from the original on 30 August 2009 Capra Frank 1977 The Name above the Title An Autobiography Da Capo Press p 328 ISBN 0 306 80771 8 Retrieved 6 May 2012 Lambeth Walk Nazi Style 1942 The Public Domain Review Retrieved 22 January 2019 Barrow Erik 1993 Documentary A History of Non fiction Films Oxford Oxford University Press p 151 ISBN 0 19 507898 5 Into Battle No 4 These are the Men Indiana University Bloomington Retrieved 10 September 2022 Leni Riefenstahl Hand held history The Economist 11 September 2003 Rising David 9 September 2003 Hitler s filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl revered and reviled for her work dies at 101 Associated Press Petropolous Jonathan 11 September 2003 Leni Riefenstahl Coy Propagandist of the Nazi Era The Wall Street Journal Riding Alan 9 September 2003 Leni Riefenstahl Filmmaker and Nazi Propagandist Dies at 101 The New York Times Harding Luke 10 September 2003 Leni Riefenstahl Hitler s favourite film propagandist dies at 101 The Guardian a b Ebert Roger 24 June 1994 The Wonderful Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl Chicago Sun Times Thomson David 2010 The New Biographical Dictionary of Film Fifth Edition New York Knopf p 822 ISBN 978 0 307 27174 7 Ebert Roger 26 June 2008 Triumph of the Will 1935 Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on 6 April 2011 Retrieved 12 September 2015 Susan Sontag On Style in Against Interpretation and Other Essays New York Dell Publishing Company Laurel 1969 originally published by Farrar Straus amp Giroux 1966 pp 34 35 In the 1969 paperback edition she observes that she does not necessarily agree with all the positions expressed in the book s essays though when I wrote them I believed what I wrote p 6 Reeves Nicholas 2003 1999 The Power of Film Propaganda Myth or Reality London New York Continuum p 107 ISBN 0 82647 390 3 Trimborn Jurgen 2007 Leni Riefenstahl A Life New York Faber and Faber p 240 ISBN 9780374184933 Nazis Hold Lambeth Walk is Animalistic Hopping The New York Times January 8 1939 p 26 The Goofy Anti Nazi Parody Video That Enraged Goebbels Slate magazine 9 February 2016 Trimborn pp 123 124 Rollins Peter C ed 2003 Indoctrination and Propaganda 1942 1945 The Columbia companion to American history on film How the movies have portrayed the American past Columbia University Press pp 118 Rother 2003 p 148 Rother 2003 p 150 Rother 2003 p 149 Meyer 2007 p 179 Meyer 2007 p 184 Copyright Restoration of Works in Accordance With the Uruguay Round Agreements Act Notice Federal Register 61 46133 46159 30 August 1996 Pessach Guy Shur Ofry Michal 28 April 2019 Copyright and the Holocaust Yale Journal of Law amp the Humanities 30 2 9 ISSN 1041 6374 Retrieved 4 July 2020 note 37 Works cited edit Rother Rainer 1 October 2003 Leni Riefenstahl The Seduction of Genius A amp C Black ISBN 9780826470232 Meyer Lena 2007 Verbotene Filme in German Berlin LIT Verlag Munster ISBN 9783825801434 Further reading editCheshire Ellen 2000 Leni Riefenstahl Documentary Film Maker Or Propagandist Kamera Archived from the original on 17 December 2005 Kershaw Ian 1987 The Hitler Myth Oxford NY Oxford University Press pp 48 49 ISBN 0 19 821964 4 Shirer William Berlin Diary The Journal of a Foreign Correspondent 1934 1941 New York Alfred A Knopf 1941 Includes a contemporary account of the 1934 Nuremberg rally Smith David Calvert 1990 Triumph of the Will A Film by Leni Riefenstahl Richardson TX Celluloid Chronicles Press Archived from the original on 20 February 2002 Complete screenplay Welch David 1993 The Third Reich Politics and Propaganda New Fetter Lane London Routledge pp 65 72 ISBN 0 415 09033 4 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Triumph of the Will Das Blaue Licht Triumph des Willens 1935 the original Riefenstahl website Screenplay of Triumph of the Will DasBlaueLicht net Hinter den Kulissen des Reichsparteitag Films Riefenstahl s 1935 book on the making of the film with many photographs in German Triumph of the Will at IMDb nbsp Triumph of the Will at Rotten Tomatoes nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Triumph of the Will amp oldid 1193300542, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.