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Black Fox: The True Story of Adolf Hitler (1962)

Black Fox: The True Story of Adolf Hitler (1962)

GENRESDocumentary,Biography,History,War
LANGEnglish,German
ACTOR
Marlene DietrichAdolf Hitler
DIRECTOR
Louis Clyde Stoumen

SYNOPSICS

Black Fox: The True Story of Adolf Hitler (1962) is a English,German movie. Louis Clyde Stoumen has directed this movie. Marlene Dietrich,Adolf Hitler are the starring of this movie. It was released in 1962. Black Fox: The True Story of Adolf Hitler (1962) is considered one of the best Documentary,Biography,History,War movie in India and around the world.

Louis Clyde Stoumen's Oscar-winning documentary feature combines World War II newsreel footage with an adaptation of the European folk tale Reynard the Fox, illustrated by old-fashioned woodcuts. The narration by actress Marlene Dietrich draws parallels between the rise and fall of Adolf Hitler and the cunning, treacherous trickster figure of the fable. The film also includes graphic footage taken during and after the liberation of the Nazi concentration camps.

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Black Fox: The True Story of Adolf Hitler (1962) Reviews

  • Shocking, sad but important movie...

    oblio422004-07-11

    I rented this movie years ago and it was the first time I had seen any of the old archive footage of the atrocities of Adolf Hitler. The scenes of the ovens, the starving masses and the Allied soldiers helping the survivors and bulldozing the hundreds and hundreds of emancipated corpses, made me burst into tears. It may not be the quintessential "Holocaust" movie (Schindler's List perhaps?), but it is worth seeing. Even though it is painful to watch. While not for young children, curious older teens should only watch this with their parents so it can be discussed and their questions answered. This kind of movie makes us all witnesses and jurors to this horrid time in history, and keepers of the truth so that it will never happen again. ~Learn the lessons from History, lest we be doomed to repeat~

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  • I too am a Historian

    crenfro19902011-02-02

    I have to completely disagree with a couple of the reviews that I read regarding this documentary. As the History Channel and A&E do justice to many of Hitler's documentaries and more current information, we need to remember that this documentary was made in 1962 and not all the information was so readily at hand. I felt that though Marlene Dietrich was very eloquent and understandable as did my history teacher husband. This documentary didn't have all the "re-creations" of History Channel and many, many other well done docs, but for it's time it was finely executed. It used real footage, authentic photos and actual quotations. "Reynard" was used as to compare Hitler and his ego. If you ever read "Reynard" or studied the story Reynard the Fox was medieval Europe's trickster figure, a nasty but charismatic character who was always in trouble but always able to talk his way out of any retribution. I thought that this movie is a beautiful study of human tragedy as well as human condition. I could find no contradictions nor any reason to not study this movie as a piece of art and history. In 1962 this topic was still so fresh and unbelievable in peoples' minds that to see this from their perspective would have been shocking and unbelievable. I believe that this is raw and real and it speaks the truth. It does not romanticize nor glamorize what took place.

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  • Documentary that has not aged well.

    StudentDriver1999-09-26

    In this age of A&E's Biography, and cable channels devoted to documentaries, sometimes it's eye-opening and entertaining to go back and watch one made "in the past" when theatrical showings were the only outlet. Then again, sometimes it's not. Black Fox actually seems older than it is- I'm surprised when I see that it was filmed in 1962, because it comes across as a heavy-handed propaganda piece concurrent with Hitler's reign. It's almost embarrassing to watch, as the "documentary" actually has very little to say, and Marlene Dietrich gives her all to give it some kind of meaning. The film switches back and forth between Hitler's machinations and doings, and an odd, old folk-tale of a "black fox" and his dealings with his fellow animals. The folk-tale is illustrated with static woodcuts- you half expect a picture of Vlad Tepes somewhere along the way. It's as if the directors were either trying to put the whole WW2/Europe story into something acceptable for children, or were trying to emulate George Orwell's Animal Farm, and turn history into an anthropomorphic parable. The film is very heavy-handed, and the parable just bogs the whole thing down. I admit I write this with a view of the modern documentary in mind... but Black Fox isn't entertaining, isn't educational, and was a waste of a purchase.

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  • evil comes in the form of people

    lee_eisenberg2018-04-30

    Louis Stoumen's Academy Award-winning "Black Fox: The True Story of Adolf Hitler" looks at the life of the man whose name is synonymous with evil. It consists of footage and photographs from the Fuhrer's birth to the Nuremberg trials. Probably the main things to take from it are that the reparations imposed on Germany undeniably created the conditions that led to Hitler's rise to power, and his crimes against humanity couldn't have happened without the complicity of individuals. The scene where US and Soviet troops meet in Germany calls to mind that two years later, the WWII-era superpowers became enemies. The war known as a good war gave way to an undeclared war that unleashed horrendous crimes by both sides. Seeing Hitler's methods, it's hard not to see a parallel with the current crop of demagogues. A certain orange man is the obvious one, but Europe now has a new set of them (the UK's Nigel Farage, Hungary's Viktor Orban, and others). How long before another global war breaks out? Marlene Dietrich narrates the documentary. She's an unusual choice to narrate, but the story remains the important part. The world had seen genocides before Hitler's actions and there have been genocides since. Can the human race ever stop doing this?

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  • God. Man. Reality. And Dietrich's Horrible Narration

    strong-122-4788852017-03-23

    Yes. Indeed. This Nazi/WW2 history-documentary from 1962 certainly had its fair share of good points, as well as its decidedly bad points, too. Topping the list of its most detrimental deficits of all was having to endure listening to Hollywood, glamour queen, Marlene Dietrich do the voice-over narration. Delivering her "spiel" in a strictly "phone-in" fashion - Dietrich had a really annoying habit of pronouncing her r's as if they were w's. For example - She pronounced the word "brave" as "bwave", and "great" as "gweat". As you can well-imagine - Listening to Dietrich ramble on this way with her extra-thick, German accent quickly began to grate on my nerves like you wouldn't believe. Had this history-documentary offered the viewer the option for subtitles (which it didn't), then, yes, I could have easily turned a total deaf-ear to that doofus Dietrich (who came across to me sounding like a female Elmer Fudd). Anyway - On the positive side - This documentary certainly did contain some really excellent, vintage, newsreel footage that made it a worthwhile program to watch, in the long run.

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