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- Here_Is_Germany runtime "60.0".
- Here_Is_Germany abstract "Here is Germany is a 1945 propaganda documentary film directed by Frank Capra. Like its companion film, Know Your Enemy: Japan, the film is a full-length exploration of why one of the two major Axis countries started World War II and what had to be done to keep them from "doing it again".The film opens with scenes of everyday life in Germany, described by narrator Walter Huston. It shows people such as housewives, mailmen, farmers and policemen at work, and notes that these people were not so different from us, and seem like people Americans can understand. Anthony Veiller then interrupts with "Or can we?", as the film then switches to a montage of Nazi concentration camps and piles of dead bodies. The narrator notes that this is not the only time that Germany has unleashed war on the world, stating that while its generation fought the "Nazis", its fathers fought the "Huns" (pejorative term for Germany during World War I), and its grand father remembers the "Prussians". The narrator claims that it was all part of the same German lust for conquest.Going even further back, 150 years, the film informs us that while America, Britain, and France were forming their democratic traditions, Germany was a group of 300 medieval feudal states, not one of them with a constitution or parliament. The film traces the rise of Prussia from Frederick the Great through Bismarck, telling the audience that the Prussian state was dominated first by aristocratic landowners, militarists and state officials, later joined by the big industrialists. This development of a military-industrial dominated state climaxes in the catastrophe of World War I. When the plutocrats knew that they were beaten, according to the film, they allowed democratic parties to take the reins of power and immediately set about destabilising and discrediting the new republic. Once accomplished they found a stooge in Adolf Hitler, who would finally destroy the liberal Weimar Republic with the addition of a 5th pillar - criminals.The film depicts the Third Reich entirely from this perspective, seeing Nazism as simply a continuation of the aggressive German tradition, and then merely a façade for the military-industrial complex. The film says that Poles, Italians, Belgians, and Americans were murdered by the Germans. The Nazi persecution of Jews is not explicitly mentioned, but in the initial sequence of Nazi atrocities it shows the bones of "men, women and children: sent to be exterminated in a German death factory". The film also shows what are alleged to be "objects of art, made from human skin."".
- Here_Is_Germany director Frank_Capra.
- Here_Is_Germany narrator Anthony_Veiller.
- Here_Is_Germany narrator Walter_Huston.
- Here_Is_Germany producer United_States_Office_of_War_Information.
- Here_Is_Germany runtime "3600.0".
- Here_Is_Germany wikiPageExternalLink 133c06l03HereIsGermany.htm.
- Here_Is_Germany wikiPageID "10542973".
- Here_Is_Germany wikiPageRevisionID "600465983".
- Here_Is_Germany country "United States".
- Here_Is_Germany director Frank_Capra.
- Here_Is_Germany hasPhotoCollection Here_Is_Germany.
- Here_Is_Germany language "English".
- Here_Is_Germany name "Here is Germany".
- Here_Is_Germany narrator Anthony_Veiller.
- Here_Is_Germany narrator Walter_Huston.
- Here_Is_Germany producer United_States_Office_of_War_Information.
- Here_Is_Germany released "1945".
- Here_Is_Germany runtime "3600.0".
- Here_Is_Germany wordnet_type synset-movie-noun-1.
- Here_Is_Germany subject Category:1945_films.
- Here_Is_Germany subject Category:American_World_War_II_propaganda_films.
- Here_Is_Germany subject Category:American_documentary_films.
- Here_Is_Germany subject Category:Anti-German_sentiment.
- Here_Is_Germany subject Category:Germany–United_States_relations.
- Here_Is_Germany subject Category:United_States_Department_of_War.
- Here_Is_Germany type 1945Films.
- Here_Is_Germany type Abstraction100002137.
- Here_Is_Germany type AmericanDocumentaryFilms.
- Here_Is_Germany type AmericanWorldWarIIPropagandaFilms.
- Here_Is_Germany type Artifact100021939.
- Here_Is_Germany type Creation103129123.
- Here_Is_Germany type Documentary106616806.
- Here_Is_Germany type Event100029378.
- Here_Is_Germany type Movie106613686.
- Here_Is_Germany type Object100002684.
- Here_Is_Germany type PhysicalEntity100001930.
- Here_Is_Germany type Product104007894.
- Here_Is_Germany type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Here_Is_Germany type Show106619065.
- Here_Is_Germany type SocialEvent107288639.
- Here_Is_Germany type Whole100003553.
- Here_Is_Germany type YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity.
- Here_Is_Germany type Film.
- Here_Is_Germany type Work.
- Here_Is_Germany type Wikidata:Q11424.
- Here_Is_Germany type CreativeWork.
- Here_Is_Germany type Movie.
- Here_Is_Germany type InformationEntity.
- Here_Is_Germany comment "Here is Germany is a 1945 propaganda documentary film directed by Frank Capra. Like its companion film, Know Your Enemy: Japan, the film is a full-length exploration of why one of the two major Axis countries started World War II and what had to be done to keep them from "doing it again".The film opens with scenes of everyday life in Germany, described by narrator Walter Huston.".
- Here_Is_Germany label "Here Is Germany".
- Here_Is_Germany sameAs m.02qhbmn.
- Here_Is_Germany sameAs Q5737365.
- Here_Is_Germany sameAs Q5737365.
- Here_Is_Germany sameAs Here_Is_Germany.
- Here_Is_Germany wasDerivedFrom Here_Is_Germany?oldid=600465983.
- Here_Is_Germany isPrimaryTopicOf Here_Is_Germany.
- Here_Is_Germany name "Here is Germany".