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Leni Riefenstahl (1902–2003)

Auteur de Mémoires

32+ oeuvres 808 utilisateurs 22 critiques 2 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: Image © ÖNB/Wien

Œuvres de Leni Riefenstahl

Mémoires (1987) 262 exemplaires
The Last of the Nuba (1973) 106 exemplaires
Africa (1982) 95 exemplaires
Les Nouba de Kau (1976) — Photographe — 84 exemplaires
Triumph of the Will [1935 film] (1935) — Directeur — 71 exemplaires
Olympia: Photobook (1994) 57 exemplaires
Olympia [1938 film] (1938) 28 exemplaires
Coral Gardens (1829) 23 exemplaires
The Blue Light [1932 film] (1932) — Director/Screenwriter/Cast — 12 exemplaires
Vanishing Africa (1982) 10 exemplaires
Schönheit im olympischen Kampf (1937) 9 exemplaires
Visions of Paradise (1978) — Auteur — 8 exemplaires
Memoiren : 1945-1987 (1995) 6 exemplaires
Olympia Part One: Festival of the Nations [1938 film] — Director/Screenwriter — 6 exemplaires
Kampf in Schnee und Eis (1933) 5 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

The Holy Mountain [1926 film] (1926) 10 exemplaires
100 Years of Olympic Films: 1912–2012 (2017) — Contributeur — 4 exemplaires
S.O.S. Iceberg [1933 film] — Actor — 1 exemplaire
Early Women Filmmakers: An International Anthology (2017) — Directeur — 1 exemplaire

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I had high hopes that Riefenstahl's Memoirs would offer an inside look at life in Hitler's most-intimate circle, but alas, that was not to be. To begin with, besides her work on her 1936 film, Triumph of the Will, which documents Hitler's Nazi party rally in Nuremberg that year, she did little film work at all during World War II. Yes, she spoke with Hitler on several occasions, often at events to honor German artists such as herself, but she was no Nazi insider.
Her memoirs are interesting, but sad, and Riefenstahl, who insists she wrote them herself, without the help of a ghost writer, is not a gifted writer. Yes, she initially believed Hitler would be good for Germany, despite his racist views, which she says she believed he expressed only to win popular political support. Yes, he turned out to be terrible for Germany. No, she knew nothing of the Holocaust. Yes, she was slandered as a "Nazi slut" for the rest of her long life, but Riefenstahl never squarely addresses the main criticism of her, that she promoted a man and an ideology that destroyed Germany and much of the rest of the world and included the murder of many millions of Jews, Poles, homosexuals, Communists, German liberals and Gypsies. Was she blinded by opportunity? By Hitler's personal magnetism (she certainly believes Hitler would have made her his mistress had she ben interested). True, her contribution to the Nazi ascent has been greatly exagerated, but what should have been a suitable punishment for a talented artist who sold her soul?
Riefenstahl did suffer, however, which her memoirs make clear. After the war, she was imprisoned for months, and then, time and again when she seemed to have lined up support to make another film, someone always objects to her because of her link to Hitler and the project is cancelled. Despite the deserved acclaim for her film about the 1936 Olympics, she barely had enough money to pay her debts and afford a small home near Munich.
While there are few insights into the Nazi hierarchy, Riefenstahl's account of her early years as a movie star, primarily of films shot in the Alps or in Greenland, are fascinating. Working at a time when stunt men (or women) were rare, she learned to ski and mountain climb for roles that tested her physical and mental strength. She survives several serious falls, anxiously walks on a ladder across a deep crevasse, and is nearly buried in a landslide (captured on film). In a harrowing sequence in which she was supposed to crash a biplane into an ice floe, the German WWI flying ace Ernst Udet secretly piloted the plane from the back seat, crashing it into the ice where it starts to burn as he and Riefenstahl leap from the wreckage.
Riefenstahl claims the director Josef von Sternberg tried to seduce her but nevertheless she insisted he screen test an unknown Marlene Dietrich (who lived on her block) for what turned out to be her star-making role in his movie The Blue Angel. And besides her refusal to work for him, she says Nazi propaganda chief Goebbels hated her also because she refused to become his mistress.
Riefenstahl did manage to win accolades for her later photographic work, much of it focusing on the primitive Nuba people in northern Sudan or in underwater images. She seems admirable for her sheer stubbornness to continue trying to work as a visual artist despite decades of rejection.
But she also seems temperamental, judgmental and impulsive, and it is often difficult to decide how much to believe details of her memoirs.
The biggest omission from them, however, is that Riefenstahl never mentions any particular challenges she faced as a woman. She is on any short list of the most influential female directors or photographers of all time, yet the issue never comes up, whether she is dealing with demanding movie producers, testosterone-fueled Nazis, or Sudanese officialdom.
In the end, to me, that is what is most impressive about Riefenstahl, that despite setbacks and wrong turns that would have convinced most of us to take a job teaching film at a junior college, Riefenstahl instead is headed for a barren track in Africa or a remote undersea location, even into her 70s and 80s. It is ironic that the title of the film which ended up ruining her career, Triumph of the Will, ends up as the perfect title for her memoirs.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
SteveJohnson | 2 autres critiques | Mar 19, 2023 |
After German generals complained about the army's lack of presence in Leni Riefenstahl's "Triumph of the Will", she produced this propaganda piece for them. (fonte: Imdb)
 
Signalé
MemorialeSardoShoah | Jan 8, 2021 |
è il primo film di propaganda diretto da Leni Riefenstahl. Il suo film racconta il quinto raduno del partito nazista, che ebbe luogo a Norimberga dal 30 agosto al 3 settembre 1933. Venne fatto "sparire" a seguito della "Notte dei lunghi coltelli" in quanto in esso vi erano parecchie immagini di Hitler insieme a Ernst Rohm. (fonte: Wikipedia)
 
Signalé
MemorialeSardoShoah | 1 autre critique | Jul 8, 2020 |
Il trionfo della volontà è un film di propaganda Nazionalsocialista del 1935, diretto da Leni Riefenstahl. Il film documenta il Raduno di Norimberga del Partito Nazionalsocialista Tedesco dei Lavoratori svoltosi dal 4 al 10 settembre 1934 (fonte: Wikipedia)
 
Signalé
MemorialeSardoShoah | 4 autres critiques | Jul 4, 2020 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
32
Aussi par
7
Membres
808
Popularité
#31,571
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
22
ISBN
74
Langues
7
Favoris
2

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