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The death throes of a criminal regime
By Bernd Reinhardt and Florian Linden
19 November 2004
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Downfall: Hitler and the End of the Third Reich, directed
by Oliver Hirschbiegel, script by Bernd Eichinger
Downfall: Hitler and the End of the Third Reich (Der
Untergang) is a film well worth seeing. More than three million
people have seen Downfall in the first four weeks following
its release in Germany, and the films content has provoked
a vigorous discussion in the media. The film reconstructs the
events that took place in and around Hitlers bunker in Berlin
between April 20 and May 2, 1945, during the final days of the
Second World War.
Bernd Eichinger has produced films such as The Name of the
Rose and The House of Spirits, and comedies such
as Maybe, Maybe Not and Rossini. He is Germanys
most successful producer and has up until now largely avoided
complex cinematic themes. His script for Downfall is based
on the autobiography of Hitlers secretary Traudl Junge,
Bis zur letzten Stunde, and the book Downfall
(Der Untergang) by the journalist and historian Joachim
Fest.
Fest is well known as the long-time editor of the conservative
FAZ newspaper and is the author of an extensive biography
of Hitler, which provoked controversy because it seeks to explain
National Socialism principally on the basis of the personal characteristics
of Hitler and suppresses the broader social and political context
of Hitlers rise to prominence. Eichingers script largely
avoids Fests interpretation and concentrates on the extensive
factual material surrounding the last days of Hitler. The 45th
Historians Conference, held recently in the northern city of Kiel,
praised the film for its historical accuracy.
The first Soviet grenades explode in the centre of Berlin on
Hitlers birthday. A short while later, the war has reached
the middle of the capitalhorror and chaos prevail. Death
and panic are omnipresent, bombs explode, the wounded cry out.
At the hellish heart of it all, children take on Russian tanks
with bazookas to ensure the final victory.
Largely shielded from these events, we witness the complete
moral collapse of the Nazi leadership. Nothing is left of the
thousand-year Reich aside from the despicable, demoralised
remnants of Hitlers closest supporters, who are attempting
to drink themselves into oblivion in the comfortably furnished
bunker.
Officers of the German army (Wehrmacht), who had regarded
themselves as the nations elite, have lost all control,
howl drunkenly or discuss the most effective way of shooting oneself.
Events in the bunker assume the grotesque form of a nightmare.
Eva Braun, shortly to become Hitlers bride, throws wild
parties as the exploding grenades come ever closer.
Hitler screams at his generals. Poring over a map, he manoeuvres
armies for the defence of Berlin that have long ceased to exist,
and feels betrayed by those who in better days had glorified him
as the brilliant leader. Hitler is especially bitter over his
old faithful follower, Reichsführer SS Heinrich
Himmler, who wants to do a deal with the allied forces.
Himmler expresses his hopes of convincing Roosevelt to retain
the SS after the war in order to maintain control over the German
population and secure law and order. Hitler and Goebbels continue
up to the last minute to hope for a military alliance with the
US against their common enemythe Bolsheviks. Then the Red
Army advances to the proximity of the bunker itself.
Even as the leader declares that everything is finished,
child soldiers are still being sent to their death while Goebbelss
assault troops hunt down those civilians who are unprepared to
fight. Cornered by the Gestapo in their apartments, they are shot
on the spot as traitors.
Eventually, the hard core of Hitler supporters take their own
lives while others try to save their skinsrats leaving the
sinking ship. Confronted with his own personal downfall and the
prospect of a life after the Third Reich, Hitlers architect,
Albert Speer, in a fit of courage, informs Hitler that over a
period of time he refused to follow his orders for a complete
destruction of civil infrastructure in Germany. Leading army commanders
express their concerns for the fate of the civilian population,
only to then abruptly carry out Hitlers ruthless and senseless
orders.
One young woman, the 25-year-old secretary of Hitler, Traudl
Junge, looks on with growing bewilderment and horror as a facade
implodes, leaving nothing behind but filth and chaos.
The people wanted it this way, propaganda minister Goebbels
maintainsafter all, they voted for the Nazis. Now they will
have their throats cut, and Reichschancellor Hitler
cynically declares that the German people had proven to be too
weak in the natural struggle for survival and therefore deserve
to perish. A capitulation is out of the question. In front of
his bombastic model for his fantasy cityGermaniaHitler
maintains that there is one advantage arising from the complete
destruction of the German capitalfor its reconstruction,
one only has to clear away the rubble.
In the final stages of his life, he is concerned only with
how he can most effectively commit suicide. The egocentric wretchedness
in the bunker reaches its high point with the murder by their
own mother of Goebbelss six innocent childrenNazi
Germanys model familybefore father and
mother follow their children and take their own lives.
The figure of Hitler is portrayed in a credible and vivid fashion
by the Swiss actor Bruno Ganz. For the first time, the attempt
has been made in German film to portray Hitler as a real figure
rather than as a caricature or simply as a beast. The attempt
is impressive and represents a qualitative step forward by which
future films on the theme of National Socialism will be measured.
But it is not just the character of Hitler that is at the heart
of the film. The film shows the unparalleled indifference and
contempt by the Nazis for the broad masses of working people.
A small elite employed brutal violence and trampled on the most
elementary rights of the majority of the populationto the
point of their mass extinction in the course of warall in
the name of the unity of the nation.
The officer caste heading the German army, with its traditional
deep roots in the German aristocracy, had little time for democracy
and largely shared the Nazi outlook. This layer was deeply implicated
in the crimes committed by the regime. Up to today, influential
circles in the army stubbornly refuse to acknowledge the responsibility
of the Wehrmacht for Nazi crimesoften by explaining that
the implicated officers had taken a personal oath of loyalty to
Hitler as the supreme representative of the German people and
therefore bore no responsibility themselves.
The grotesque unwavering loyalty of the army leadership to
Hitler, one man who had lost all sense of reality some time before,
results from their basic contempt for humanity and this elitist
outlook. The decision by the military to continue the struggle,
although the situation for the people as a whole was hopeless,
reflected their social perspective. Only after the death of Hitler
and Goebbels are a few army commanders prepared to capitulate.
Others prefer to shoot themselves rather than relive a repeat
of the disgrace of 1918which also burdens Hitler
in the filmGerman capitulation after defeat in the First
World War. This defeat not only led to German subordination to
the victorious allies via the treaty of Versailles, but also resulted
in a popular uprising and the eruption of socialist revolution
in Germany.
To further the dramatic content of the film, its makers have
attempted to uncover positive figures with whom the audience can
identify. These leads to some historical figures being depicted
in an overly favourable light.
For example, there is Himmlers adjutant and brother-in-law
of Eva Braun, Hermann Fegelein, who is shot for desertion. The
film presents him as a figure who was at least prepared to question
the servile mentality that prevailed in the army. However, the
historical record reveals a different Fegelein.
In 1928, he joined the Bavarian police force in Munich. After
the dissolution of the state police, he joined the Nazi SS and
after the beginning of the war was instrumental in constructing
the mounted deaths-head (Totenkopf ) special
unit of the SS. As a leader of his brigade in Poland and the Soviet
Union, Hermann Fegelein ordered so-called cleansing operations,
and his unit combed the swamps of Pripjet for partisans.
His principal victims were thousands of Jews. Even within the
SS he won a reputation as an unscrupulous careerist who manoeuvred
himself into Hitlers presence by deliberately marrying the
sister of Eva Braun.
In Downfall, the doctor Professor Schenk, through whose
eyes we see the suffering of the wounded, exudes the humanitarian
selflessness of a Red Cross medical orderly. In fact, Schenk had
been a member of the Nazi SA since 1933 and later held senior
posts in the SS and Wehrmacht. He was instrumental in installing
an herb plantation in the concentration camp of Dachau. Hundreds
of internees died in the course of their forced labour on the
project. He used other camp prisoners as human guinea pigs for
experiments in which many lost their lives. The films depiction
of his humanitarianism has more in common with Schenks own
memoirs than reality.
And was Traudl Junge really so untouched by the dictatorship
during which she reached adulthood, bearing in mind that she was
the daughter of a member of the NSDAP?
Despite these weaknesses, Downfall: Hitler and the End of
the Third Reich is a complex and impressive piece of work.
The film shows the final days and hours of a clique that had plunged
the world into a murderous war and now attempts to thrust aside
any responsibility for the collapse and catastrophe that ensues.
As the disastrous consequences of their actions becomes increasingly
evident, the reaction of Hitler and Goebbels is to pursue even
more doggedly and brutally their policiesalong the lines
of the motto Who cares what happens when I am gone!
In their legacies, which they dictate to Traudl Junge before their
deaths, both men refer to their love of the people,
whom they had served. In reality, they are consumed with contempt
for the masses and visions of their own importance.
The catastrophic consequences and end of this regime also have
such ominous reverberations under circumstances where similar
tendencies can be identified in contemporary politics.
One example is the Bush government in the US. The more the
situation in Iraq spirals out of their control, the more the government
and military respond by lining up their next victimpotentially
Iran. At the same time, the methods used in Iraq against the civilian
population become ever more brutal. Torture is carried out in
the prisons as a matter of course, and the most vicious bombardment
undertaken to crush any resistance. As popular opposition grows
to the occupation, the brutality of the US army increases. As
its policies transform increasingly into a debacle the government
presses ahead with exactly the same coursebut with renewed
ruthlessness.
This is also a foretaste of what the population of the US can
expect when the ruling elite no longer see the possibility of
being able to suppress by traditional measures the enormous social
conflicts surging under the surface. The ruling class then requires
figures at the head of state who are prepared to employ the same
level of brutality and unscrupulousness that characterised the
leadership of the Nazis.
See Also:
Media lies and war
crimes: the instructive case of Julius Streicher
[25 March 2003]
The debate in Germany
over the crimes of Hitlers Wehrmacht: Part 2
[20 September 2001]
The debate in Germany
over the crimes of Hitlers Wehrmacht: Part 1
[19 September 2001]
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