Swastika (film)
Swastika is a 1973 British documentary film by Philippe Mora.[1][2][3][4] It was shown at that year's Cannes Film Festival which nearly caused a riot.[5]
Summary[]
A study of Nazism and the private lives of Adolf Hitler (as he wanted to be seen) and his wife Eva Braun through newsreel clips, pre-war propaganda, documentary material and even Eva's color home movies.[6][7][8][9][10][11]
Home media[]
It was released by Kino Lorber on DVD on June 16, 2012.[12]
See also[]
- Gone with the Wind - Oscar-winning epic mentioned in the documentary film
- Triumph of the Will
- List of banned films
References[]
- ^ The New Yorker
- ^ College Screens Disturbing Images of 'Swastika' - Los Angeles Times
- ^ BFI
- ^ Turner Classic Movies
- ^ Festival de Cannes
- ^ SWASTIKA (Philippe Mora, 1974) on Vimeo
- ^ Time Out
- ^ Swastika: A Review on Project MUSE
- ^ Germans ready to see Hitler as human|The World from PRX
- ^ Video Detective
- ^ Screen Slate
- ^ DVD Savant Review
External links[]
Categories:
- Collage film
- 1973 films
- British documentary films
- 1970s documentary films
- Documentary films about Adolf Hitler
- Films directed by Philippe Mora
- Documentary films about Nazis