The trivialization of a Hitler movie.
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More recently, there was this version produced after the Democratic primaries in North Carolina and Indiana last week:
Click here if the video file above doesn't play properly.
These were the only two variations of this gimmick that had come my way until today, when I came across this post by Karina Longworth, who is surprised to discover that there have been several other variations as well. She comments:
Almost all of these clips have view counts on YouTube in the six or seven figures. Downfall was the second-highest grossing foreign language film of 2005, but it still only made about $5.5 million. Almost certainly, more people in this country have now seen a clip from the film wrangled into a new context than would have ever seen the film in its original state. Downfall thus becomes part of the cultural conversation, but at the same time, it seems unlikely that any of these clips could effectively function as commercials for the film. Maybe it’s sad or maybe it’s totally appropriate, but it seems clear that the general YouTube user would be able to summon way more excitement for the concept of Hitler on the phone with Microsoft tech support, than they would for the concept of Hitler…doing Hitler stuff.So, ironically, the movie that was supposed to "humanize" Hitler -- not by excusing him, but by treating him as a human being with enormous flaws rather than a cartoon or a supernatural demonic type -- has ended up contributing to his trivialization.


6 Comments:
Wow. I hadn't really realized the extent to which that clip had been re-titled, but I should have. About a month ago, a fellow graduate from my alma mater, a small Christian university, sent me a link (sent to him in turn by one of our former professors) to that same clip, adapted by a current student to mock campus security.
You probably won't read this, but in my opinion you have it completely backwards. Hitler is such an unknown to younger people that comparing him to such things is most likely bringing their understanding of him closer to the reality than not. You can see him as an irrational human, refusing to give up a lost cause due to these clips. Just my 2 cents.
I read everything. :)
Know of any place we can see the original, with English subtitles? It'd be even funnier to compare these with the original (though, this is all somewhat disturbing, I suppose).
LOL. Hitler FTL!
Actually, It's funny that you said it wouldn't serve as an advertisement. I hit this site with the google search "hitler movie" after seeing the xbox360 subtitled version and wondering what the real movie title was so I could rent it. I guess I'm at least one example of a person that this method reached. I'd never heard of the movie but like foreign films.
I find these videos offensive in the sense that they trivialize the fact that this man was a mass murderer and undermine the artistic intention of the director of this film. The whole scenario as listed above is disgusting for so many reasons: the original ignorance and audacity of the copier (wit aside), the copiers of the copier who could find something so offensive, funny enough, to blatantly rip off the idea to promote their own crap, and even these responses which trivialize the whole situation and see a justification of speculative ends justifying their means.
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