fucking love this movie
Fucking love this movie
Other urls found in this thread:
youtube.com
youtube.com
twitter.com
The last minute part went real lefty, the book was better
Movie was based apart from a few scenes.
At the end, when Hitler gave that speech, that was kind of a redpill, and it would of redpilled the masses if it wasn't for the "hurr durr stop the nazees" at the end.
The book was better just because the movie created all that borat crap road trip with hitler and the cuck during 40m (yes, the dog scene is movie original)
I didn't like that Hitler killed the dog. He liked animals
Even the ending seemed to be implying that Hitler will rise again because of how bad Europe has gotten because of liberal leftist policies
You autismos are so buttstuffed with ideology you completely rewrote the intentions of the film in your brains. Sad!
Whatever the maker's intentions it's pretty difficult to watch this movie and NOT agree with Hitler by the end.
It's a useful subtle redpill to slip to people.
lel you also belive american history x is antinazi don't you?
Specifically, I should add, that speech in the TV studio works to turn Hitler into the good guy. Honestly who would disagree with him?
What movie is this?
Haven't watched the movie.
>implying hijacking lefty propaganda isn't the ultimate media experience
see also: starship troopers
Shrek 4
I don't agree with Hitler at the end. Hitler can be persuasive in the film but I don't agree with him. His persuasiveness is supposed to be reflective for the viewer, not argumentative.
How is this intended to make his sympathetic? Are you speaking of the speech at the end?
Look who's back. It's on European Netflix.
The whole point of the movie was to lure you into friendly support of Hitler in a Paradise Lost sort of way where you end up being surprised by your own sympathy for the villain. This leads to the message that people (particularly the German people) always have it in them to return to their Nazi ways and so we need to be cautious.
The problem is that they forget to make you feel concerned about being a Nazi and just toss out "oh yeah, the Holocaust" towards the end and besides it Hitler is totally endearing throughout.
I don't understand what you're saying
I couldn't finish it because the Germans were all so faggy. If that was meant to make me mad enough to not want to watch anymore it worked.
I agree with your first paragraph.
You're right about the film doing a poor job of arguing against Hitler. In the film they only really do that with the scene where he shots the dog and conspiring to cause violence, but that is only reflective of the character.
It also makes a few points about the medias effect on our perceptions
The violence he justifies and the dog shooting is played off in an endearing way. I don't believe the director knew what they were doing.
I think is presupposes that the viewer will feel guilt about being enticed, similar to bring seduced to do something bad.
This could be true. We aren't Germans and the movie seems so tailored to a German audience.
No, the one in the TV studio:
youtube.com
It's frustrating to think about, because the viewer is much different than the characters. The viewer knows it is the real Hitler while the characters do not. This is a poor choice I think because the viewer would respond much differently with the knowledge they have than the characters, who think he is a comedian.
WHERE CAN I STREAM IT
Oh you are right, this speech does make him quite sympathetic. It reminds us of some of Hitler's appeal
It was a good movie but I'm not sure I understood the motive
Is it pro-nationalism? Anti?
Hitler comes back and gets a cult following behind him, though most consider him a joke
How the fuck was this allowed to be made in Germany ?
The argument is clearly anti-nationalist but it does a poor job making that point. Part of the film is dealing with Hitler's legacy and it does a good job reminding the viewer how Hitler became popular but a bad job reminding the viewer why he was bad, as if the filmmakers assumed this stance, which is fine, but would've balanced the film more.