Haltickling
2nd Level Green Feather
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2001
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Just saw the movie "Fatherland" (with Rutger Hauer) on TV. It describes a fictitious "Germania" in 1964, after Hitler had won the war. The movie plot itself (a criminal investigation) is rather boring, but the scenario is utterly depressing, with many a parallel to nowaday's world.
"Greater Germania" on the map looks very much like a map of the EU; Albert Speer's design of a new Berlin (rather good trick effect in the movie) is built like in his historic model; the SS has become a regular police force, and the Gestapo takes the same role as the "Stasi" in the former GDR.
To create an impression of an absolutistic country in the sixties, the director made it look like the former GDR, with political propaganda, huge pseudo-modern monuments, and even Wartburg and Skoda cars.
Ironic: On accasion of a white-haired Hitler's 75th birthday, the US president "Joe Kennedy sr." is visiting Germany to end the Cold War. One of the journalists in his entourage uncovers the secrets of the "Wannsee-Conference", where the extinction of the Jews was decided. In the movie, the truth about the Holocaust was covered up by a victorious Germany...
All in all, the movie left me rather depressed, but strangely excited about its similarities with rather recent geopolitical developments. This movie is fiction, but not for entertainment; it's a metaphor.
"Greater Germania" on the map looks very much like a map of the EU; Albert Speer's design of a new Berlin (rather good trick effect in the movie) is built like in his historic model; the SS has become a regular police force, and the Gestapo takes the same role as the "Stasi" in the former GDR.
To create an impression of an absolutistic country in the sixties, the director made it look like the former GDR, with political propaganda, huge pseudo-modern monuments, and even Wartburg and Skoda cars.
Ironic: On accasion of a white-haired Hitler's 75th birthday, the US president "Joe Kennedy sr." is visiting Germany to end the Cold War. One of the journalists in his entourage uncovers the secrets of the "Wannsee-Conference", where the extinction of the Jews was decided. In the movie, the truth about the Holocaust was covered up by a victorious Germany...
All in all, the movie left me rather depressed, but strangely excited about its similarities with rather recent geopolitical developments. This movie is fiction, but not for entertainment; it's a metaphor.





