Veit Harlan: The Life and Work of a Nazi Filmmaker by Frank Noack
Requirements: ePUB Reader, 12.4MB
Overview: Veit Harlan (1899–1964) was one of Germany’s most controversial and loathed directors. After studying with theatre and film pioneer Max Reinhardt and beginning a promising career, he became one of Joseph Goebbels’s leading filmmakers under the National Socialist regime. Harlan’s Jud Süss (Jew Suss, 1940), in particular, stands as one of the most artistically distinct and morally reprehensible films produced by the Third Reich. His involvement with this movie has led to many critical questions: Was the director truly forced to make the film under penalty of death? Is anti-Semitism a theme in his other productions? Can and should his work be studied in light of the horrors of Nazism and the Holocaust?
The first English-language biography of the notorious director, Veit Harlan presents an in-depth portrait of the man who is arguably the only Nazi filmmaker with a distinct authorial style and body of work. Author Frank Noack reveals that both Harlan’s life and work were marked by creative vision, startling ambiguities, and deep moral flaws. His meticulously detailed study explores the director’s influence on German cinema and places his work within the contexts of World War II and film history as a whole.
Genre: Non-Fiction, Biography
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