Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated:
1
00:00:06,700 --> 00:00:08,260
Adolf Hitler.
2
00:00:10,140 --> 00:00:13,500
He is the architect of one of
the greatest disasters
3
00:00:13,500 --> 00:00:15,380
the world has ever seen.
4
00:00:15,380 --> 00:00:18,700
The most photographed leader of
the early 20th century.
5
00:00:19,860 --> 00:00:24,180
He spent hours in front of a mirror
practising different poses.
6
00:00:24,180 --> 00:00:26,700
Every photo was a performance.
7
00:00:26,700 --> 00:00:29,980
Hitler was photographed from
boyhood...
8
00:00:29,980 --> 00:00:31,620
..to the Blitzkrieg...
9
00:00:31,620 --> 00:00:35,940
He wants to be at the front.
He wants to share the excitement.
He wants to smell the cordite.
10
00:00:35,940 --> 00:00:37,780
..to the bunker.
11
00:00:37,780 --> 00:00:42,100
These images reveal the secrets of
Hitler's inner life
12
00:00:42,100 --> 00:00:44,580
and the people he led.
13
00:00:44,580 --> 00:00:47,540
Hitler comes in and he tells you,
"you are important."
14
00:00:47,540 --> 00:00:49,980
He tells you he has a plan
and he tells you
15
00:00:49,980 --> 00:00:52,500
he knows what's gone wrong and he
can fix it.
16
00:00:52,500 --> 00:00:56,180
Featuring rarely seen
and newly digitised images,
17
00:00:56,180 --> 00:01:00,100
this is the story of the rise
and fall of Adolf Hitler,
18
00:01:00,100 --> 00:01:02,140
picture-by-picture,
19
00:01:02,140 --> 00:01:04,100
frame-by-frame.
20
00:01:04,100 --> 00:01:07,860
I think Hitler created an image of
political celebrity
21
00:01:07,860 --> 00:01:09,660
that never existed before.
22
00:01:09,660 --> 00:01:11,940
The manipulation of media,
23
00:01:11,940 --> 00:01:14,220
the presentation of himself,
24
00:01:14,220 --> 00:01:16,260
you can draw a line from that
25
00:01:16,260 --> 00:01:18,940
to what film and rock stars
are doing today.
26
00:01:35,100 --> 00:01:37,020
After six years in power,
27
00:01:37,020 --> 00:01:41,420
Hitler launches his Blitzkrieg,
the Lightning War.
28
00:01:41,420 --> 00:01:44,820
Tens of thousands
of troops pour into Poland.
29
00:01:44,820 --> 00:01:48,220
His tanks and planes smash cities
and towns.
30
00:01:50,260 --> 00:01:53,340
The Poles actually fight very gamely
against the Germans,
31
00:01:53,340 --> 00:01:57,700
but they are outnumbered,
outgunned, outthought.
32
00:01:57,700 --> 00:02:00,060
Hitler travelled to the front line,
33
00:02:00,060 --> 00:02:02,420
deliberately putting himself
close to the action.
34
00:02:04,300 --> 00:02:07,380
He could have been exposed
potentially to Polish air attack
35
00:02:07,380 --> 00:02:08,740
or to a Polish sniper,
36
00:02:08,740 --> 00:02:11,780
and there's an element to which
I suppose he's very enthused
37
00:02:11,780 --> 00:02:14,340
by this war that he's unleashed.
38
00:02:14,340 --> 00:02:16,740
And of course, he wants to be seen
by his troops.
39
00:02:16,740 --> 00:02:19,260
So, there's a lot of images
from that period
40
00:02:19,260 --> 00:02:22,300
of him driving through masses of
German troops,
41
00:02:22,300 --> 00:02:25,180
all of whom want
to touch their supreme warlord.
42
00:02:26,780 --> 00:02:29,700
Hitler believed his experience
in the Bavarian Army
43
00:02:29,700 --> 00:02:33,020
had made him a master tactician.
44
00:02:33,020 --> 00:02:36,820
Hitler very much turned to his own
experiences in the First World War,
45
00:02:36,820 --> 00:02:39,180
in figuring out how to win the war.
46
00:02:39,180 --> 00:02:42,420
He would then, often override
decisions of his generals
47
00:02:42,420 --> 00:02:45,420
and say, "You have no idea what war
is really like.
48
00:02:45,420 --> 00:02:49,260
"I experienced things in the
trenches, I know what war is like,
49
00:02:49,260 --> 00:02:51,460
"therefore we need to do this
and that."
50
00:02:53,540 --> 00:02:56,420
Hitler had a fanatical desire
to make Germany
51
00:02:56,420 --> 00:02:58,020
a world superpower.
52
00:03:01,060 --> 00:03:03,420
He'd never disguised his ambition
for war.
53
00:03:04,700 --> 00:03:07,060
It had been in plain sight,
54
00:03:07,060 --> 00:03:11,940
in the pages of his political memoir
and manifesto from 1924,
55
00:03:11,940 --> 00:03:14,220
Mein Kampf.
56
00:03:14,220 --> 00:03:16,860
He talks about expansion.
57
00:03:16,860 --> 00:03:19,860
He talks about lebensraum,
living space.
58
00:03:19,860 --> 00:03:22,620
He doesn't see the German people as
being restricted
59
00:03:22,620 --> 00:03:25,020
to the existing borders of Germany.
60
00:03:25,020 --> 00:03:29,500
He sees Germany getting bigger,
and bigger, and bigger.
61
00:03:29,500 --> 00:03:32,100
On the very first page of Mein Kampf,
62
00:03:32,100 --> 00:03:35,380
Hitler stated that Germany
and his homeland of Austria
63
00:03:35,380 --> 00:03:36,780
should be united.
64
00:03:37,900 --> 00:03:41,220
"People of the same blood should be
in the same Reich."
65
00:03:43,500 --> 00:03:45,780
On the 12th of March 1938,
66
00:03:45,780 --> 00:03:48,700
14 years after writing those words,
67
00:03:48,700 --> 00:03:52,940
columns of German troops marched
across the border into Austria.
68
00:04:00,060 --> 00:04:03,500
Heinrich Hoffmann,
Hitler's official photographer,
69
00:04:03,500 --> 00:04:07,820
produced numerous photo books
promoting the cult of the Fuhrer,
70
00:04:07,820 --> 00:04:10,180
including in 1938,
71
00:04:10,180 --> 00:04:14,900
a record of the Anschluss, or union,
with Austria -
72
00:04:14,900 --> 00:04:17,260
Hitler in His Homeland.
73
00:04:19,220 --> 00:04:22,980
The photography itself
is quite remarkably clear
74
00:04:22,980 --> 00:04:25,380
and vivid and lucid,
75
00:04:25,380 --> 00:04:28,460
but what they do is show
the progression,
76
00:04:28,460 --> 00:04:30,860
they show the entry,
through the barriers,
77
00:04:30,860 --> 00:04:32,300
through the gates.
78
00:04:32,300 --> 00:04:35,380
And we follow Hitler on his journey
through Austria,
79
00:04:35,380 --> 00:04:37,580
which is a kind of
scenic heritage tour.
80
00:04:42,900 --> 00:04:50,300
We have, really, what is obviously
the Messiah of a secular religion.
81
00:04:52,140 --> 00:04:54,540
Hoffman, as he often does,
82
00:04:54,540 --> 00:04:59,220
is creating a symbolic image.
83
00:04:59,220 --> 00:05:04,020
Hitler is the still centre of
a vortex of utter ecstasy,
84
00:05:04,020 --> 00:05:10,740
where the people really become
maddened with a kind of euphoria.
85
00:05:12,340 --> 00:05:14,700
The book has minimal text.
86
00:05:14,700 --> 00:05:18,060
For the Nazis,
the image was everything.
87
00:05:18,060 --> 00:05:19,860
There are tiny little subtitles.
88
00:05:19,860 --> 00:05:21,900
No-one's going to read those.
89
00:05:21,900 --> 00:05:24,780
It is a visual feast.
90
00:05:24,780 --> 00:05:26,380
And in other words,
91
00:05:26,380 --> 00:05:29,220
they get mid-20th century, almost.
92
00:05:29,220 --> 00:05:32,860
This extraordinary evolution from
a verbal to a visual culture,
93
00:05:32,860 --> 00:05:34,500
they've got it.
94
00:05:34,500 --> 00:05:36,860
And it's truly, I think,
frightening,
95
00:05:36,860 --> 00:05:38,900
but also very clever how they
understand
96
00:05:38,900 --> 00:05:42,660
the language of the visual
is so much more powerful
97
00:05:42,660 --> 00:05:44,140
than verbal language.
98
00:05:49,860 --> 00:05:54,420
Behind the propaganda was a darker
side to the Anschluss with Austria.
99
00:05:56,700 --> 00:05:58,820
An American named Ross Baker,
100
00:05:58,820 --> 00:06:01,460
who was living in Vienna
with his family,
101
00:06:01,460 --> 00:06:03,660
filmed Hitler's arrival
in the capital...
102
00:06:08,580 --> 00:06:11,860
..and the anti-Semitic boycotts
and attacks
103
00:06:11,860 --> 00:06:14,220
that immediately followed.
104
00:06:14,220 --> 00:06:16,500
What I think is really interesting
about those films
105
00:06:16,500 --> 00:06:18,180
is that they're Americans
106
00:06:18,180 --> 00:06:22,500
and most of the footage that we have
from that period
107
00:06:22,500 --> 00:06:26,220
is of either Nazis families,
108
00:06:26,220 --> 00:06:30,300
Germans who were observers
at these events,
109
00:06:30,300 --> 00:06:33,740
but the films of the Anschluss
taken by Americans,
110
00:06:33,740 --> 00:06:35,220
I think it's really interesting
111
00:06:35,220 --> 00:06:39,060
because they are on
the outside looking in
112
00:06:39,060 --> 00:06:43,620
and they recognised
what a massive thing this is.
113
00:06:44,980 --> 00:06:48,500
Ross filmed his wife Helen's anger
at being turned away
114
00:06:48,500 --> 00:06:51,460
from a Jewish store
by a member of the SA.
115
00:06:53,780 --> 00:06:55,620
They were fearless.
116
00:06:55,620 --> 00:06:58,380
The images show their fearlessness.
117
00:07:05,820 --> 00:07:09,260
After Austria, Hitler's next target
118
00:07:09,260 --> 00:07:12,020
was the German-speaking area
of Czechoslovakia,
119
00:07:12,020 --> 00:07:14,380
known as the Sudetenland.
120
00:07:15,940 --> 00:07:19,780
However, the Western democracies
like Britain and France
121
00:07:19,780 --> 00:07:23,020
were desperate to avoid
another European war.
122
00:07:23,020 --> 00:07:25,260
A peace deal had to be struck.
123
00:07:26,700 --> 00:07:28,500
They'd lived through
the First World War,
124
00:07:28,500 --> 00:07:31,100
they'd seen the carnage that
it had created.
125
00:07:31,100 --> 00:07:34,580
There wasn't a family in Britain
who hadn't been bereaved
126
00:07:34,580 --> 00:07:36,260
by the First World War,
127
00:07:36,260 --> 00:07:38,700
and they really didn't want this
to happen again.
128
00:07:38,700 --> 00:07:40,460
We're going to hope for the best,
129
00:07:40,460 --> 00:07:43,180
and we're going to let Germany have
what it lost.
130
00:07:43,180 --> 00:07:45,220
Why not? That makes sense.
131
00:07:45,220 --> 00:07:47,860
Those bits of Austria
and Czechoslovakia, the Sudetenland,
132
00:07:47,860 --> 00:07:49,260
they're German, are they not?
133
00:07:51,540 --> 00:07:54,540
On the 15th of September, 1938,
134
00:07:54,540 --> 00:07:57,500
the British Prime Minister
Neville Chamberlain flew to Munich
135
00:07:57,500 --> 00:08:00,020
to discuss the issue of
the Sudetenland with Hitler.
136
00:08:05,780 --> 00:08:11,260
The body language in this image from
Munich in 1938 speaks volumes.
137
00:08:11,260 --> 00:08:13,780
First of all, let's just look at
Neville Chamberlain,
138
00:08:13,780 --> 00:08:15,380
the British Prime Minister,
on the left.
139
00:08:15,380 --> 00:08:18,940
He looks anxious.
He's wanting Hitler's attention.
140
00:08:18,940 --> 00:08:22,100
He's fiddling with his hand,
with his cuffs.
141
00:08:22,100 --> 00:08:25,380
It's someone trying
to take control of the situation
142
00:08:25,380 --> 00:08:27,860
and trying to be composed,
trying to keep it together.
143
00:08:27,860 --> 00:08:31,820
But now compare that expression
with that of Hitler.
144
00:08:31,820 --> 00:08:34,340
He's not really listening
to what Chamberlain's saying.
145
00:08:34,340 --> 00:08:37,660
He'll just say anything to get rid
of this old man in the room.
146
00:08:37,660 --> 00:08:41,420
"Yeah, he can have his agreement,
but you know what?
147
00:08:41,420 --> 00:08:43,060
"I'm going to break it."
148
00:08:46,620 --> 00:08:50,500
In the Munich Agreement
of September 1938,
149
00:08:50,500 --> 00:08:53,340
Czechoslovakia was forced
to give up the Sudetenland.
150
00:08:55,620 --> 00:08:59,260
Hitler the warlord wanted more.
151
00:08:59,260 --> 00:09:02,740
The following March, he seized the
rest of Czechoslovakia.
152
00:09:04,620 --> 00:09:06,580
Poland was next in his cross-hairs.
153
00:09:07,900 --> 00:09:10,860
Realising Hitler could no longer
be appeased,
154
00:09:10,860 --> 00:09:13,340
Britain and France
promised to defend the Poles.
155
00:09:17,220 --> 00:09:20,180
To ensure he wouldn't also be
attacked from the east,
156
00:09:20,180 --> 00:09:22,140
Hitler made a non-aggression pact
157
00:09:22,140 --> 00:09:25,820
with the leader of
the Soviet Union, Stalin.
158
00:09:25,820 --> 00:09:30,060
They also secretly agreed
to carve up Poland between them.
159
00:09:31,940 --> 00:09:35,660
The Nazis and the Communists
hated each other.
160
00:09:35,660 --> 00:09:38,940
They'd been at each other's throats
all the way through
the 1920s and '30s.
161
00:09:38,940 --> 00:09:42,220
There'd been battles in the streets
in Berlin.
162
00:09:42,220 --> 00:09:45,260
So, the idea of them forming
some sort of pact with one another
163
00:09:45,260 --> 00:09:46,820
was seemingly ridiculous.
164
00:09:46,820 --> 00:09:48,500
I mean, nobody saw it coming.
165
00:09:48,500 --> 00:09:53,500
Let's spool back to that image
of Hitler in 1914,
166
00:09:53,500 --> 00:09:56,020
celebrating war being declared
on Russia.
167
00:09:57,420 --> 00:10:01,180
That's the same man who's now
cutting a deal with the Russians?
168
00:10:01,180 --> 00:10:03,500
To so many, it does not add up.
169
00:10:06,020 --> 00:10:08,060
He is pragmatic.
170
00:10:08,060 --> 00:10:11,180
He knows that unless he does
a deal with Stalin,
171
00:10:11,180 --> 00:10:14,700
he's not going to get
the free hand in the countries
172
00:10:14,700 --> 00:10:18,460
to the east of Germany that Hitler
is so desperate to acquire.
173
00:10:18,460 --> 00:10:20,820
He knows that if he doesn't do
this deal,
174
00:10:20,820 --> 00:10:23,620
he won't be able to get away
with what he wants to achieve.
175
00:10:24,900 --> 00:10:28,460
Hitler was fascinated by Stalin.
176
00:10:28,460 --> 00:10:31,460
As part of the delegation
to Moscow to sign the pact,
177
00:10:31,460 --> 00:10:33,300
Hitler sent his old friend
178
00:10:33,300 --> 00:10:35,980
and official photographer,
Heinrich Hoffmann,
179
00:10:35,980 --> 00:10:37,740
to be his eyes and ears.
180
00:10:42,300 --> 00:10:45,260
So, he sends Hoffmann to Moscow
effectively as a spy,
181
00:10:45,260 --> 00:10:47,100
to have a good look at Stalin,
182
00:10:47,100 --> 00:10:49,460
which is, in itself,
quite remarkable.
183
00:10:49,460 --> 00:10:52,380
He was someone that wasn't
particularly seen very often.
184
00:10:52,380 --> 00:10:54,300
Actually, in sort of
Soviet newsreels,
185
00:10:54,300 --> 00:10:57,020
he was someone slightly
in the background.
186
00:10:57,020 --> 00:10:58,860
He thought Stalin was
quite fascinating,
187
00:10:58,860 --> 00:11:01,620
not least because of what he had
achieved in the Soviet Union.
188
00:11:03,580 --> 00:11:07,820
Hoffmann's work as a propagandist
for Hitler was well-known to Stalin.
189
00:11:08,780 --> 00:11:10,380
After the signing,
190
00:11:10,380 --> 00:11:13,740
the Soviet leader proposed
a toast in broken German,
191
00:11:13,740 --> 00:11:16,740
wishing him a long life.
192
00:11:16,740 --> 00:11:19,740
And then Hoffmann goes back after
the signature of the treaty
193
00:11:19,740 --> 00:11:21,700
and they have this session together.
194
00:11:21,700 --> 00:11:23,900
Hitler and Hoffmann go through
the photographs.
195
00:11:24,980 --> 00:11:26,620
Hitler's very disappointed
that he sees
196
00:11:26,620 --> 00:11:29,100
a photograph of Stalin smoking,
for example.
197
00:11:29,100 --> 00:11:31,900
He considers smoking
to be absolutely abhorrent
198
00:11:31,900 --> 00:11:35,620
and a signifier of
a decadent personality.
199
00:11:35,620 --> 00:11:38,380
Hoffmann dutifully removed
Stalin's cigarette
200
00:11:38,380 --> 00:11:41,020
from all the official
German pictures of the signing.
201
00:11:43,060 --> 00:11:45,340
With Stalin off his back,
202
00:11:45,340 --> 00:11:48,340
Hitler was now free to attack Poland.
203
00:11:55,780 --> 00:11:59,740
The non-aggression pact
with Stalin was a political coup,
204
00:11:59,740 --> 00:12:03,100
but Hitler needed a reason
to take on the Poles,
205
00:12:03,100 --> 00:12:05,540
a way for Germany to look
the innocent victim
206
00:12:05,540 --> 00:12:07,100
of Polish aggression.
207
00:12:09,500 --> 00:12:11,940
If no genuine grievance
could be found,
208
00:12:11,940 --> 00:12:13,820
a con trick would do.
209
00:12:15,100 --> 00:12:17,020
He gets this from Heinrich Himmler
210
00:12:17,020 --> 00:12:19,380
and Reinhard Heydrich at the SS,
211
00:12:19,380 --> 00:12:23,300
who come up with this idea of
staging a false flag operation.
212
00:12:24,580 --> 00:12:28,500
On the evening of
the 31st of August 1939,
213
00:12:28,500 --> 00:12:32,100
SS men dressed in Polish uniforms
staged a raid
214
00:12:32,100 --> 00:12:35,500
on a radio transmitter at
the German town of Gleiwitz
215
00:12:35,500 --> 00:12:37,260
close to the border.
216
00:12:37,260 --> 00:12:39,820
They tied up the staff
and then broadcast a message
217
00:12:39,820 --> 00:12:42,740
urging Poles living in Germany
to rebel.
218
00:12:44,460 --> 00:12:46,740
The way that they sort of sell to
the world
219
00:12:46,740 --> 00:12:48,260
that this was a Polish attack
220
00:12:48,260 --> 00:12:51,060
is by leaving a Polish corpse
at the site.
221
00:12:52,380 --> 00:12:58,260
The man chosen by the SS was
43-year-old Franciszek Honiok.
222
00:12:58,260 --> 00:13:03,300
Franciszek would become the
Second World War's first casualty.
223
00:13:03,300 --> 00:13:07,100
He was an ethnic Pole living in
German Upper Silesia
224
00:13:07,100 --> 00:13:10,580
and he was known within
that German province
225
00:13:10,580 --> 00:13:13,500
as something of
a pro-Polish firebrand.
226
00:13:13,500 --> 00:13:17,260
And he was someone who was in
the wrong place at the wrong time.
227
00:13:18,620 --> 00:13:21,900
He was arrested about two days
before the Gleiwitz incident,
228
00:13:21,900 --> 00:13:25,340
brought to the site already drugged,
already incoherent.
229
00:13:26,860 --> 00:13:29,620
He is shot and his body
is left at the site.
230
00:13:31,220 --> 00:13:33,900
And he is there solely as proof
231
00:13:33,900 --> 00:13:36,420
that this was an attack by
Polish irregulars.
232
00:13:38,140 --> 00:13:39,540
But he's entirely innocent.
233
00:13:41,140 --> 00:13:43,060
Hitler had his excuse.
234
00:13:45,580 --> 00:13:49,500
The following morning,
the 1st of September 1939,
235
00:13:49,500 --> 00:13:51,700
Germany invades Poland.
236
00:13:52,980 --> 00:13:56,020
Hitler makes a very solemn speech to
the German Reichstag,
237
00:13:56,020 --> 00:13:58,420
in which he opens his speech
by saying,
238
00:13:58,420 --> 00:14:02,820
"Since 4:45am, we are firing back."
239
00:14:02,820 --> 00:14:07,460
And he cites the Gleiwitz incident
as evidence of Polish aggression,
240
00:14:07,460 --> 00:14:09,820
this is his reason for
going to war.
241
00:14:09,820 --> 00:14:12,820
And poor old Honiok was the man
that carried the can for them.
242
00:14:17,860 --> 00:14:19,300
It was called Blitzkrieg,
243
00:14:19,300 --> 00:14:21,060
it was called Lightning War,
244
00:14:21,060 --> 00:14:24,140
and within weeks,
Hitler's in Warsaw.
245
00:14:30,180 --> 00:14:34,180
The Germans fought a ruthless
and bloody war.
246
00:14:34,180 --> 00:14:38,860
There was an almost wanton targeting
of Polish civilian populations,
247
00:14:38,860 --> 00:14:42,180
of Polish POWs, Polish Jews,
particularly, as well.
248
00:14:43,540 --> 00:14:47,580
And within that five-week period
of that military campaign,
249
00:14:47,580 --> 00:14:50,540
it's been estimated that there are
over 600 massacres
250
00:14:50,540 --> 00:14:52,460
carried out by German forces.
251
00:14:59,180 --> 00:15:02,580
Most of the propaganda photographs
in Poland
252
00:15:02,580 --> 00:15:04,420
were taken by Heinrich Hoffmann.
253
00:15:07,700 --> 00:15:12,420
Hitler also brought with him
a film cameraman named Walter Frentz,
254
00:15:12,420 --> 00:15:15,620
to provide footage
for German cinema newsreels.
255
00:15:17,820 --> 00:15:21,140
Frentz always travelled with
a lightweight Leica camera,
256
00:15:21,140 --> 00:15:24,060
to grab photographs
for his own personal collection.
257
00:15:26,500 --> 00:15:29,580
This rarely seen picture was taken
on a plane
258
00:15:29,580 --> 00:15:32,020
on the way to the Polish front.
259
00:15:32,020 --> 00:15:34,860
Now, this is a very
gentle photograph,
260
00:15:34,860 --> 00:15:36,580
an intimate picture of
Hitler, really.
261
00:15:36,580 --> 00:15:38,260
We don't see many like that.
262
00:15:38,260 --> 00:15:41,860
For me, as a photographer, who's
been a road with many a politician,
263
00:15:41,860 --> 00:15:43,900
it's something about the intimacy,
264
00:15:43,900 --> 00:15:46,540
the fact that we've got him relaxed,
265
00:15:46,540 --> 00:15:49,860
taken on the QT with a Leica,
266
00:15:49,860 --> 00:15:52,220
Hitler wouldn't have heard
the camera go off.
267
00:15:52,220 --> 00:15:54,100
It would just be
a very gentle click.
268
00:15:56,180 --> 00:15:59,180
But for me, the disturbing thing
about this,
269
00:15:59,180 --> 00:16:02,300
this is the day he's off to Poland
in the plane
270
00:16:02,300 --> 00:16:05,420
where many Jews
and many Poles were killed.
271
00:16:05,420 --> 00:16:09,820
And the contrast between
the gentleness of this picture
272
00:16:09,820 --> 00:16:13,540
and the atrocity of what happened
in Poland is stunning.
273
00:16:13,540 --> 00:16:15,740
A gentle picture of
a disturbing man.
274
00:16:23,500 --> 00:16:26,020
It was Walter Frentz who,
nine months later,
275
00:16:26,020 --> 00:16:29,020
filmed this remarkable piece
of footage -
276
00:16:29,020 --> 00:16:31,860
Hitler dancing with joy
as he receives the news
277
00:16:31,860 --> 00:16:33,660
that France had surrendered.
278
00:16:34,820 --> 00:16:39,060
The country had capitulated to
the Nazis in just six weeks.
279
00:16:40,900 --> 00:16:43,500
By then, Denmark, Norway,
280
00:16:43,500 --> 00:16:45,740
Belgium and Holland
had also fallen...
281
00:16:47,500 --> 00:16:50,220
..and the British humiliated
at Dunkirk.
282
00:16:53,460 --> 00:16:58,180
There's something kind of almost
Tigger-ish and charming about it.
283
00:16:58,180 --> 00:17:02,580
I'm not wishing to give him
any positive attributes at all,
284
00:17:02,580 --> 00:17:04,860
but there is something
very natural about it.
285
00:17:04,860 --> 00:17:06,220
And that's very rare for Hitler,
286
00:17:06,220 --> 00:17:09,740
because so much of his imagery is
very, very tightly controlled,
287
00:17:09,740 --> 00:17:12,500
and suddenly he's dancing
a little jig.
288
00:17:12,500 --> 00:17:17,740
It's not very grown-up,
but he can't contain himself.
289
00:17:22,940 --> 00:17:26,660
On the 22nd of June,
Hitler and his generals assembled
290
00:17:26,660 --> 00:17:29,780
in the forest of Compiegne
outside Paris
291
00:17:29,780 --> 00:17:31,500
to sign the French surrender.
292
00:17:32,700 --> 00:17:36,340
Hoffmann and Frentz were there
to capture the historic moment.
293
00:17:36,340 --> 00:17:39,460
22nd of June. Sweet revenge, indeed.
294
00:17:40,820 --> 00:17:46,100
The symbolism of Compiegne is that
that is where the Armistice in 1918
295
00:17:46,100 --> 00:17:49,500
is signed when the French
are firmly in control.
296
00:17:49,500 --> 00:17:52,140
They're making the Germans sign
a surrender,
297
00:17:52,140 --> 00:17:53,700
they're humiliating the Germans.
298
00:17:53,700 --> 00:17:56,060
So, when the tables are turned,
299
00:17:56,060 --> 00:18:01,220
Hitler insists that they go back to
Compiegne to sign the new Armistice
300
00:18:01,220 --> 00:18:03,700
with the French
having to hand over power.
301
00:18:03,700 --> 00:18:08,660
And he insists on signing the
agreement in the same train carriage
302
00:18:08,660 --> 00:18:11,300
that they'd used for the
First World War, and not only that,
303
00:18:11,300 --> 00:18:14,860
he takes the train carriage out of
the museum where it's housed
304
00:18:14,860 --> 00:18:18,580
and puts it in the exact spot where
it had been in 1918,
305
00:18:18,580 --> 00:18:20,060
just to rub it in.
306
00:18:20,060 --> 00:18:22,860
And then, when he goes in,
he sits down in the chair
307
00:18:22,860 --> 00:18:26,340
that the French generals had sat in
22 years earlier,
308
00:18:26,340 --> 00:18:30,740
so he's really rubbing it in,
it's a real moment of humiliation
for the French.
309
00:18:33,780 --> 00:18:37,420
Hitler spent the next few days
sightseeing in France.
310
00:18:42,180 --> 00:18:44,100
Together with old comrades,
311
00:18:44,100 --> 00:18:47,060
he visited the battlefields
of Flanders
312
00:18:47,060 --> 00:18:49,260
where they'd served
in the First World War.
313
00:18:51,100 --> 00:18:54,900
Then, on the 23rd of June,
early in the morning,
314
00:18:54,900 --> 00:18:57,540
Hitler arrived in triumph in Paris.
315
00:18:59,380 --> 00:19:02,460
Accompanied by architect Albert Speer
316
00:19:02,460 --> 00:19:04,820
and sculptor Arno Baker,
317
00:19:04,820 --> 00:19:07,300
Hitler was photographed by
Hoffmann in front of
318
00:19:07,300 --> 00:19:09,300
the Eiffel Tower -
319
00:19:09,300 --> 00:19:12,300
Walter Frentz filmed
at the Fuhrer's feet.
320
00:19:13,540 --> 00:19:16,740
The Eiffel Tower is, really,
a symbol of France.
321
00:19:16,740 --> 00:19:20,340
It's a symbol of France and
French power and French technology,
322
00:19:20,340 --> 00:19:23,300
and suddenly we have a photograph of
Hitler standing in front of it.
323
00:19:24,700 --> 00:19:26,420
It belongs to him.
324
00:19:26,420 --> 00:19:27,900
He's taken over.
325
00:19:29,260 --> 00:19:30,980
The whole of the French economy,
326
00:19:30,980 --> 00:19:33,260
the French idea of power,
the French government,
327
00:19:33,260 --> 00:19:35,180
it's all now under Hitler's control.
328
00:19:38,980 --> 00:19:42,620
Speer and Baker were later removed
by Hoffmann
329
00:19:42,620 --> 00:19:44,660
to make Hitler the focus of the cover
330
00:19:44,660 --> 00:19:47,260
of his best-selling collection
of photos -
331
00:19:47,260 --> 00:19:49,460
With Hitler in the West.
332
00:19:50,660 --> 00:19:53,300
As Hitler and his generals
walked away,
333
00:19:53,300 --> 00:19:56,060
Hoffmann took another
iconic photograph.
334
00:19:58,260 --> 00:20:00,460
Now, the quality
of this picture is superb.
335
00:20:01,700 --> 00:20:04,060
The strength of the uniforms,
336
00:20:04,060 --> 00:20:07,460
the contrast between the sky
and the blackness of the uniforms
337
00:20:07,460 --> 00:20:10,060
and this emblematic Eiffel Tower.
338
00:20:11,620 --> 00:20:13,420
The photograph is taken
339
00:20:13,420 --> 00:20:17,020
by the photographer going backwards
slowly.
340
00:20:17,020 --> 00:20:18,380
He would've set it up.
341
00:20:18,380 --> 00:20:20,220
You don't get these pictures
by accident.
342
00:20:20,220 --> 00:20:21,980
He would've framed the top of
the tower.
343
00:20:21,980 --> 00:20:24,420
He would've said, "Walk towards me,"
344
00:20:24,420 --> 00:20:26,340
and he would've backed off
and backed off
345
00:20:26,340 --> 00:20:29,380
until the framing is right,
346
00:20:29,380 --> 00:20:32,020
cos that picture would be nothing
if it was cut in half.
347
00:20:33,820 --> 00:20:35,700
This picture would've gone around
the world,
348
00:20:35,700 --> 00:20:40,220
would've been on the front covers of
newspapers in America, Russia,
349
00:20:40,220 --> 00:20:42,820
and it would've been a very,
very powerful document.
350
00:20:44,100 --> 00:20:45,740
At that moment,
351
00:20:45,740 --> 00:20:50,100
total victory in Europe
seemed in Hitler's grasp.
352
00:21:00,060 --> 00:21:02,340
By the summer of 1940,
353
00:21:02,340 --> 00:21:04,700
Hitler had re-written history
354
00:21:04,700 --> 00:21:08,940
and avenged the humiliation
of Germany's defeat in 1918.
355
00:21:10,100 --> 00:21:11,620
Within a year,
356
00:21:11,620 --> 00:21:14,260
he had achieved everything that
Imperial Germany had failed
357
00:21:14,260 --> 00:21:16,620
to achieve in four years
in the First World War.
358
00:21:16,620 --> 00:21:19,980
He had succeeded beyond
even his own wildest dream.
359
00:21:19,980 --> 00:21:22,740
And this actually feeds into
Hitler's own sense
360
00:21:22,740 --> 00:21:26,180
of his own abilities,
inflated sense of his own abilities.
361
00:21:26,180 --> 00:21:28,300
It feeds his own narcissism,
362
00:21:28,300 --> 00:21:30,900
that he's the greatest
military leader of all time.
363
00:21:35,660 --> 00:21:38,860
With Western Europe now occupied
by his troops,
364
00:21:38,860 --> 00:21:42,180
Hitler's pact with Stalin had served
its purpose.
365
00:21:43,500 --> 00:21:46,900
In December 1940,
he issued a directive to the Army,
366
00:21:46,900 --> 00:21:51,140
the Wehrmacht, to prepare for
the invasion of the Soviet Union.
367
00:21:53,180 --> 00:21:55,900
He believed a swift victory
was inevitable.
368
00:21:58,100 --> 00:22:01,260
Hitler famously said,
"All you have to do is kick the door
369
00:22:01,260 --> 00:22:03,980
"and the whole rotten structure
will come tumbling down."
370
00:22:05,260 --> 00:22:09,220
On June 22nd 1941,
371
00:22:09,220 --> 00:22:14,420
the invasion, codenamed
Operation Barbarossa, began.
372
00:22:14,420 --> 00:22:16,140
Hitler's invasion of
the Soviet Union
373
00:22:16,140 --> 00:22:20,460
to a large extent is the
defining military moment of the war.
374
00:22:20,460 --> 00:22:21,940
This is the defining conflict.
375
00:22:27,740 --> 00:22:30,100
The scale of the attack on
the Soviet Union
376
00:22:30,100 --> 00:22:33,260
was unlike anything
that has been seen before or since.
377
00:22:34,780 --> 00:22:37,140
This is 1,000 miles of front.
378
00:22:37,140 --> 00:22:39,980
It stretches all the way from
the Baltic down to the Black Sea.
379
00:22:39,980 --> 00:22:44,460
They've got three and a half million
men in their armies, fighting.
380
00:22:44,460 --> 00:22:49,100
They have to have that many men
because there are 5 million
Soviet soldiers facing them.
381
00:22:50,180 --> 00:22:52,660
They've got 3,000 tanks,
382
00:22:52,660 --> 00:22:54,220
4,000 planes,
383
00:22:54,220 --> 00:22:56,580
600,000 armoured vehicles.
384
00:22:56,580 --> 00:23:00,140
I mean, just the sheer scale
of this is beyond imagination.
385
00:23:03,540 --> 00:23:08,260
This time, Hitler doesn't go to
the fast-moving front line.
386
00:23:08,260 --> 00:23:10,860
Instead, he is filmed
and photographed
387
00:23:10,860 --> 00:23:13,260
at his field headquarters,
388
00:23:13,260 --> 00:23:15,780
giving the German public
the reassurance
389
00:23:15,780 --> 00:23:19,460
that the conqueror of France
is in control.
390
00:23:19,460 --> 00:23:21,180
He religiously pours over maps
391
00:23:21,180 --> 00:23:23,300
and discusses tactics with generals,
392
00:23:23,300 --> 00:23:25,580
and, of course,
they always still regard him
393
00:23:25,580 --> 00:23:27,020
at the back of their minds as
394
00:23:27,020 --> 00:23:28,820
Hitler's still this sort of
corporal,
395
00:23:28,820 --> 00:23:31,220
and I think they still find it
very militarily difficult
396
00:23:31,220 --> 00:23:32,980
to deal with this man
who's obviously
397
00:23:32,980 --> 00:23:35,940
so much more militarily junior
than they are.
398
00:23:35,940 --> 00:23:38,300
He sees himself
as a master tactician.
399
00:23:38,300 --> 00:23:39,740
He's simply not.
400
00:23:42,180 --> 00:23:45,860
Operation Barbarossa failed.
401
00:23:45,860 --> 00:23:49,460
The Germans were poorly equipped
for the Russian winter.
402
00:23:49,460 --> 00:23:53,780
Their tanks broke down
and supply lines were stretched.
403
00:23:53,780 --> 00:23:56,140
While they made territorial gains,
404
00:23:56,140 --> 00:23:59,820
the Wehrmacht suffered
half a million casualties
405
00:23:59,820 --> 00:24:02,580
in the first three months alone.
406
00:24:02,580 --> 00:24:05,780
Stalin is able to call upon
what seems like
407
00:24:05,780 --> 00:24:09,460
an infinite number of men,
and indeed women.
408
00:24:09,460 --> 00:24:13,340
Women are put on the front line
in a way that simply weren't done
409
00:24:13,340 --> 00:24:15,940
at the time anywhere else.
410
00:24:15,940 --> 00:24:20,580
It's just ultimately size, weather,
411
00:24:20,580 --> 00:24:23,580
bad mechanisation,
and Soviet manpower.
412
00:24:25,660 --> 00:24:28,580
Germany's inability to defeat
the Soviets
413
00:24:28,580 --> 00:24:30,780
was a turning point in the war.
414
00:24:36,420 --> 00:24:39,500
On December the 7th 1941,
415
00:24:39,500 --> 00:24:44,580
Japan shocked the world
by attacking Pearl Harbor.
416
00:24:44,580 --> 00:24:47,380
Hitler immediately supported
his ally in the east
417
00:24:47,380 --> 00:24:50,780
and declared war on
the United States.
418
00:24:50,780 --> 00:24:52,300
In some ways, it's understandable
419
00:24:52,300 --> 00:24:55,580
because America was already
really on the side of Britain,
420
00:24:55,580 --> 00:24:58,460
they were supplying Britain already,
421
00:24:58,460 --> 00:25:01,020
but there's a big difference
between getting supplies
422
00:25:01,020 --> 00:25:03,900
from the United States
and getting their Air Force,
423
00:25:03,900 --> 00:25:08,660
their Navy, and their massive Army
over to Europe as well.
424
00:25:08,660 --> 00:25:11,740
Once you are ranged against all
of that military power
425
00:25:11,740 --> 00:25:13,940
and all of that economic might...
426
00:25:15,020 --> 00:25:16,460
..Germany's fate was sealed.
427
00:25:22,020 --> 00:25:26,060
For Hitler,
the war was all-consuming.
428
00:25:26,060 --> 00:25:28,620
He became increasingly hidden
from his people.
429
00:25:29,740 --> 00:25:33,380
In 1942, he gave just five
public speeches.
430
00:25:34,540 --> 00:25:38,940
Photo opportunities were
few and far between.
431
00:25:38,940 --> 00:25:40,740
Hitler actually becomes
much more reclusive.
432
00:25:40,740 --> 00:25:43,820
He much more concerns himself
with the affairs of the war.
433
00:25:43,820 --> 00:25:45,300
That's his sort of primary job.
434
00:25:45,300 --> 00:25:47,940
That's what he sees as his
primary job.
435
00:25:47,940 --> 00:25:51,460
He makes very few
public appearances.
436
00:25:51,460 --> 00:25:56,140
But the old,
you might say archive of images
437
00:25:56,140 --> 00:25:59,340
that had been generated between
really 1926,
438
00:25:59,340 --> 00:26:02,060
already, all the way up to '39, '40,
439
00:26:02,060 --> 00:26:05,260
that is still very alive and
that is reproduced, of course.
440
00:26:05,260 --> 00:26:06,940
So, the cult of Hitler,
441
00:26:06,940 --> 00:26:09,620
the myth of Hitler is kept alive
through images,
442
00:26:09,620 --> 00:26:14,020
even though he himself has withdrawn
to his headquarters.
443
00:26:14,020 --> 00:26:17,980
So, he remains present in
the German imagination
444
00:26:17,980 --> 00:26:20,100
through those earlier images,
445
00:26:20,100 --> 00:26:22,420
and they keep
the Fuhrer cult alive.
446
00:26:25,260 --> 00:26:28,860
Hitler spent most of his time
in his field headquarters
447
00:26:28,860 --> 00:26:32,260
or at the Berghof,
his Bavarian mountain retreat.
448
00:26:34,180 --> 00:26:38,420
This photograph was taken at
the Berghof in 1942.
449
00:26:41,620 --> 00:26:43,980
First of all,
it's a really badly taken picture.
450
00:26:43,980 --> 00:26:47,860
It's kind of badly lit,
it feels very stilted.
451
00:26:47,860 --> 00:26:51,460
They're in what looks like
kind of a ghastly basic room,
452
00:26:51,460 --> 00:26:54,940
doing this Hitler salute
to no-one in particular.
453
00:26:54,940 --> 00:26:59,180
This is Walter Frentz,
and he is documenting everything.
454
00:27:00,420 --> 00:27:03,940
You can perhaps detect
an uneasiness on their expressions.
455
00:27:03,940 --> 00:27:05,860
This is 1942.
456
00:27:05,860 --> 00:27:10,260
Things aren't going smoothly
necessarily on the Russian front.
457
00:27:10,260 --> 00:27:12,740
Actually, some of these men,
they look tired.
458
00:27:12,740 --> 00:27:15,140
It may be because the picture's
taken very late at night.
459
00:27:15,140 --> 00:27:16,500
Hitler loved staying up late.
460
00:27:16,500 --> 00:27:19,100
But these men don't look happy,
do they?
461
00:27:20,460 --> 00:27:23,460
They look nervous, blank.
462
00:27:23,460 --> 00:27:25,580
I think they look wary.
463
00:27:25,580 --> 00:27:28,700
And it's all being captured
on film.
464
00:27:30,980 --> 00:27:33,340
When this photograph was taken,
465
00:27:33,340 --> 00:27:37,260
250 million people in Europe
were under Nazi control.
466
00:27:39,140 --> 00:27:43,980
In those occupied territories,
a race war was being waged,
467
00:27:43,980 --> 00:27:48,380
the extermination
of their Jewish inhabitants.
468
00:27:48,380 --> 00:27:51,140
In Poland, hundreds of thousands
of Jews
469
00:27:51,140 --> 00:27:54,980
were herded into small,
overcrowded ghettos.
470
00:27:54,980 --> 00:27:59,380
Jewish photographers were hired by
the Jewish ghetto administrations
471
00:27:59,380 --> 00:28:01,020
to record life there.
472
00:28:03,660 --> 00:28:06,740
They created photographic records
473
00:28:06,740 --> 00:28:09,020
of work that was going on
in workshops
474
00:28:09,020 --> 00:28:10,380
and small factories
475
00:28:10,380 --> 00:28:12,860
that were presented to
the Nazi authorities,
476
00:28:12,860 --> 00:28:16,140
and this was really part of an
effort by the ghetto administration
477
00:28:16,140 --> 00:28:20,660
to prevent prisoners in the ghetto
from an even worse fate.
478
00:28:20,660 --> 00:28:22,980
They thought that by showing
that the ghetto
479
00:28:22,980 --> 00:28:25,340
was a place of useful production,
480
00:28:25,340 --> 00:28:29,580
it would prevent the authorities
from murdering the inhabitants.
481
00:28:30,820 --> 00:28:33,780
Henryk Ross was a Jewish photographer
482
00:28:33,780 --> 00:28:35,980
working in the Lodz ghetto in Poland.
483
00:28:37,820 --> 00:28:42,140
He secretly took photographs of
the brutality of life there,
484
00:28:42,140 --> 00:28:43,980
to be preserved for posterity.
485
00:28:45,260 --> 00:28:48,100
Very many people think the only
real form of resistance
486
00:28:48,100 --> 00:28:49,900
is armed resistance.
487
00:28:49,900 --> 00:28:52,260
But put you into the position of
someone in the ghetto,
488
00:28:52,260 --> 00:28:54,540
it's very difficult
to get hold of a gun.
489
00:28:54,540 --> 00:28:56,500
It's almost impossible.
490
00:28:56,500 --> 00:29:01,060
Another form of resistance
which developed within
those organisations,
491
00:29:01,060 --> 00:29:05,380
to document what was going on,
to collect documents,
492
00:29:05,380 --> 00:29:06,900
to hide them somewhere,
493
00:29:06,900 --> 00:29:10,060
and hope that after the war,
somebody will come back
494
00:29:10,060 --> 00:29:11,660
and prove what had happened.
495
00:29:11,660 --> 00:29:15,660
And taking picture belongs in
this category of resistance,
496
00:29:15,660 --> 00:29:18,020
to form an archive.
497
00:29:18,020 --> 00:29:20,780
And to build up an archive
was seen as resistance,
498
00:29:20,780 --> 00:29:23,140
because it's about building up
a memory.
499
00:29:23,140 --> 00:29:24,540
"This is who we are."
500
00:29:25,900 --> 00:29:29,020
On the surface,
a lot of them look harmless,
501
00:29:29,020 --> 00:29:31,300
they look intimate,
502
00:29:31,300 --> 00:29:34,060
lovely portraits of individuals.
503
00:29:34,060 --> 00:29:37,300
And we might say that they don't
show us
504
00:29:37,300 --> 00:29:41,700
the horrors of life in the ghettos,
or at least not the full extent,
505
00:29:41,700 --> 00:29:44,300
but I think it's incredibly
important that we look at these
506
00:29:44,300 --> 00:29:47,740
images now because people don't
want to be portrayed by
507
00:29:47,740 --> 00:29:50,460
the perpetrators as
the passive, helpless victims.
508
00:29:50,460 --> 00:29:54,780
They want to be portrayed as
the people who love their children,
509
00:29:54,780 --> 00:29:56,620
who have dignity,
510
00:29:56,620 --> 00:29:58,460
who still have their individuality,
511
00:29:58,460 --> 00:30:00,900
and that is how they
want to be remembered.
512
00:30:02,180 --> 00:30:06,820
In 1944, Ross buried his pictures
in metal canisters
513
00:30:06,820 --> 00:30:09,980
and returned a year later
to retrieve them
514
00:30:09,980 --> 00:30:13,660
once the Soviet Red Army
had liberated Poland.
515
00:30:13,660 --> 00:30:15,740
They're heartbreaking.
516
00:30:15,740 --> 00:30:18,020
It's very difficult to look at
these pictures.
517
00:30:18,020 --> 00:30:19,860
They're all heartbreaking.
518
00:30:21,420 --> 00:30:26,060
I particularly love Ross's picture
of a woman kissing her child.
519
00:30:26,060 --> 00:30:31,540
It's not only such a touching
moment of humanity and love.
520
00:30:31,540 --> 00:30:34,340
There's also something about
the physical quality of the image,
521
00:30:34,340 --> 00:30:35,780
which was hidden in the ground.
522
00:30:35,780 --> 00:30:37,100
And if you look closely,
523
00:30:37,100 --> 00:30:40,500
you can see that the edges of
the image have been damaged
524
00:30:40,500 --> 00:30:43,740
where the damp has eaten into
the negative.
525
00:30:43,740 --> 00:30:46,100
So, the image itself bears
526
00:30:46,100 --> 00:30:50,060
a kind of physical trace
of that history of being hidden
527
00:30:50,060 --> 00:30:51,860
and later being excavated.
528
00:30:53,380 --> 00:30:54,900
And I think it's really crucial
529
00:30:54,900 --> 00:30:56,820
to remember when we look at
photographs
530
00:30:56,820 --> 00:31:00,900
from the Nazi period that
the picture-perfect shot
531
00:31:00,900 --> 00:31:03,660
is almost always
the perpetrator shot.
532
00:31:05,820 --> 00:31:09,740
It's only the perpetrators who
are in that privileged position
of power,
533
00:31:09,740 --> 00:31:13,660
where they have access to
the perfect photographic standpoint,
534
00:31:13,660 --> 00:31:16,140
to the perfect photographic
equipment,
535
00:31:16,140 --> 00:31:19,380
to the labs and development
facilities and so forth.
536
00:31:19,380 --> 00:31:22,900
So, if we're looking for
a "good" picture,
537
00:31:22,900 --> 00:31:25,300
we're looking for
the perpetrator image.
538
00:31:27,660 --> 00:31:30,700
The pictures by Henryk Ross
are so important
539
00:31:30,700 --> 00:31:34,740
precisely because they show
the immense difficulty,
540
00:31:34,740 --> 00:31:38,580
the enormous risk that people took
to create them,
541
00:31:38,580 --> 00:31:40,100
and then to hide them.
542
00:31:42,460 --> 00:31:45,140
The unlikely story
of their survival.
543
00:31:48,020 --> 00:31:52,260
By early 1944, the Allies were
winning the conflict.
544
00:31:53,180 --> 00:31:55,780
Their troops were pushing up
through Italy.
545
00:31:55,780 --> 00:31:58,740
The Japanese were retreating across
the Pacific,
546
00:31:58,740 --> 00:32:01,780
and the Russians were slowly
advancing towards Germany.
547
00:32:04,700 --> 00:32:09,780
Capturing Hitler and ending the Nazi
nightmare finally looked possible.
548
00:32:12,140 --> 00:32:15,500
There were fears that Hitler might
try to flee Germany in disguise.
549
00:32:16,660 --> 00:32:20,340
Using a Heinrich Hoffmann portrait
from the 1930s,
550
00:32:20,340 --> 00:32:23,660
the New York Times commissioned
a leading Hollywood make-up artist
551
00:32:23,660 --> 00:32:25,380
to create different looks
552
00:32:25,380 --> 00:32:27,620
to show how Hitler
might change himself.
553
00:32:36,460 --> 00:32:40,340
Hitler monitored the war from
the Berghof, his mountain retreat.
554
00:32:42,820 --> 00:32:47,340
Life on the Berghof in the war
didn't change at all.
555
00:32:47,340 --> 00:32:49,780
They had the same routine.
556
00:32:49,780 --> 00:32:51,660
Hitler got up late.
557
00:32:51,660 --> 00:32:55,020
He had the same circle
of friends around him.
558
00:32:55,020 --> 00:32:59,340
The only difference was that now,
559
00:32:59,340 --> 00:33:01,340
he had his daily
560
00:33:01,340 --> 00:33:05,860
and nightly meetings
with his generals.
561
00:33:07,100 --> 00:33:10,500
Hitler and his inner circle
loved watching the cine films
562
00:33:10,500 --> 00:33:13,700
his girlfriend Eva Braun had taken
before the war
563
00:33:13,700 --> 00:33:16,700
and reminiscing about the past.
564
00:33:16,700 --> 00:33:21,020
Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels
wrote in his diary that it was like
565
00:33:21,020 --> 00:33:22,420
"the good old days".
566
00:33:24,540 --> 00:33:27,140
They were living in a dream world.
567
00:33:43,140 --> 00:33:46,220
On June the 6th 1944,
568
00:33:46,220 --> 00:33:49,140
the long-awaited invasion
of Northern Europe began.
569
00:33:50,260 --> 00:33:52,140
D-Day.
570
00:33:52,140 --> 00:33:55,980
In 24 hours, over 60,000 personnel
571
00:33:55,980 --> 00:34:00,420
and 9,000 vehicles were brought
ashore at Normandy.
572
00:34:00,420 --> 00:34:03,060
A 50-mile beachhead was secured.
573
00:34:04,700 --> 00:34:07,540
It's obvious how
the war is going to end now.
574
00:34:07,540 --> 00:34:10,740
Everybody knows that Germany's
going to lose the war.
575
00:34:10,740 --> 00:34:12,260
The generals all know,
576
00:34:12,260 --> 00:34:14,260
it's just what to do about it.
577
00:34:14,260 --> 00:34:17,580
And whilst Hitler is in control,
they know that there's really
578
00:34:17,580 --> 00:34:20,060
nothing they can do about it
but fight.
579
00:34:20,060 --> 00:34:22,420
So, what does that mean
your attitude towards
580
00:34:22,420 --> 00:34:23,820
the leadership's going to be?
581
00:34:26,700 --> 00:34:28,220
This picture's really fascinating
582
00:34:28,220 --> 00:34:32,860
because you can see Hitler
pictured almost right next to
583
00:34:32,860 --> 00:34:35,220
the man who wants to kill him.
584
00:34:35,220 --> 00:34:38,260
There are a lot of people in the
world at the time who wanted to
585
00:34:38,260 --> 00:34:41,060
kill Hitler, but this man on
the left of this photograph
586
00:34:41,060 --> 00:34:43,980
has a really good chance of
doing so.
587
00:34:43,980 --> 00:34:46,460
It's sort of great that
this picture exists
588
00:34:46,460 --> 00:34:48,060
because it sort of captures
589
00:34:48,060 --> 00:34:50,340
the imminent drama
of what's gonna happen.
590
00:34:52,140 --> 00:34:56,820
The officer is 36-year-old
Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg.
591
00:34:58,420 --> 00:35:00,780
A war briefing is about to take place
592
00:35:00,780 --> 00:35:03,940
in a conference room at Hitler's HQ
in East Prussia,
593
00:35:03,940 --> 00:35:05,540
called the Wolf's Lair.
594
00:35:07,900 --> 00:35:10,620
Stauffenberg was initially
supportive of the war,
595
00:35:10,620 --> 00:35:13,540
but he became appalled by
the brutality of the regime.
596
00:35:15,620 --> 00:35:19,940
He and his co-conspirators had
bigger plans than just assassination
597
00:35:19,940 --> 00:35:21,180
of their leader.
598
00:35:21,180 --> 00:35:24,780
He would lead a coup and seize power.
599
00:35:24,780 --> 00:35:26,660
It wasn't enough for
the German resistance,
600
00:35:26,660 --> 00:35:28,460
particularly the
military resistance,
601
00:35:28,460 --> 00:35:29,940
to merely kill Hitler,
602
00:35:29,940 --> 00:35:32,220
because that just means that
Germany collapses
603
00:35:32,220 --> 00:35:33,380
and they don't want that,
604
00:35:33,380 --> 00:35:35,660
because that just means that
the Third Reich will end
605
00:35:35,660 --> 00:35:37,940
and communism will sweep through
606
00:35:37,940 --> 00:35:39,900
and you'll have a Bolshevik Germany.
607
00:35:39,900 --> 00:35:41,580
They don't want that.
608
00:35:41,580 --> 00:35:44,220
Minutes after this photograph
was taken,
609
00:35:44,220 --> 00:35:48,700
Hitler and Stauffenberg took their
seats around the conference table.
610
00:35:48,700 --> 00:35:52,540
Immediately, Stauffenberg made
an excuse and departed,
611
00:35:52,540 --> 00:35:55,980
leaving behind his briefcase
containing explosives
612
00:35:55,980 --> 00:35:58,100
and a timer.
613
00:35:58,100 --> 00:36:01,300
He then flew to Berlin to co-ordinate
resistance efforts there.
614
00:36:01,300 --> 00:36:02,900
TIMER TICKS
615
00:36:02,900 --> 00:36:04,620
EXPLOSION, GLASS SHATTERS
616
00:36:07,020 --> 00:36:09,420
But the briefcase was moved.
617
00:36:09,420 --> 00:36:12,300
When the bomb exploded,
a table leg blocked
618
00:36:12,300 --> 00:36:14,020
the full force of the blast.
619
00:36:15,700 --> 00:36:18,060
His uniform was shredded,
620
00:36:18,060 --> 00:36:21,380
but Hitler survived
with minor injuries.
621
00:36:21,380 --> 00:36:23,980
Hitler's OK and so are all
the generals.
622
00:36:23,980 --> 00:36:25,700
As soon as that happens,
623
00:36:25,700 --> 00:36:29,300
as soon as Hitler is alive,
the coup is going to fail.
624
00:36:29,300 --> 00:36:32,580
Stauffenberg and the other
key conspirators were caught
625
00:36:32,580 --> 00:36:35,100
and shot by firing squad
that evening.
626
00:36:35,100 --> 00:36:36,540
GUNSHOT
627
00:36:37,820 --> 00:36:40,660
200 were hanged after a show trial.
628
00:36:43,580 --> 00:36:46,180
A few days after
the attempt on his life,
629
00:36:46,180 --> 00:36:48,700
Hitler was pictured visiting
the injured.
630
00:36:51,820 --> 00:36:55,780
It was represented as an act of
providence, Hitler's deliverance.
631
00:36:55,780 --> 00:36:58,260
The propaganda machine went
into overdrive,
632
00:36:58,260 --> 00:36:59,940
and also, of course, you had
633
00:36:59,940 --> 00:37:02,220
massive sympathy for Hitler.
634
00:37:06,660 --> 00:37:09,020
By the end of 1944,
635
00:37:09,020 --> 00:37:13,740
Germany's borders had been breached
to the east and the west.
636
00:37:13,740 --> 00:37:16,140
The Allies were closing in.
637
00:37:16,140 --> 00:37:19,220
Yet the Germans fought on.
638
00:37:19,220 --> 00:37:22,580
Why did the German people remain
so attached to Hitler
639
00:37:22,580 --> 00:37:25,660
and the idea of National Socialism
till the bitter end?
640
00:37:25,660 --> 00:37:27,420
Why did they continue to fight?
641
00:37:29,940 --> 00:37:33,740
July 1943, the Americans
and the British invade Sicily.
642
00:37:33,740 --> 00:37:36,060
Italian fascism collapses
within a few months.
643
00:37:36,060 --> 00:37:37,820
Mussolini's ousted.
644
00:37:37,820 --> 00:37:40,900
So, in Italy, there was much less
of an attachment
645
00:37:40,900 --> 00:37:43,620
to the Duce than there was
in Germany to Hitler.
646
00:37:43,620 --> 00:37:46,940
And I think the fact that
Hitler preserved his hold over
647
00:37:46,940 --> 00:37:49,740
the German collective psyche for
so much longer,
648
00:37:49,740 --> 00:37:52,500
has a lot to do with film,
photography,
649
00:37:52,500 --> 00:37:56,580
and the very rich imagery
that the Nazis create,
650
00:37:56,580 --> 00:37:59,260
before '33, but especially
after '33,
651
00:37:59,260 --> 00:38:03,500
turning Hitler into
a charismatic leader.
652
00:38:04,580 --> 00:38:06,780
CHEERING
653
00:38:11,420 --> 00:38:14,540
On January the 16th 1945,
654
00:38:14,540 --> 00:38:17,740
Hitler retreated to his bunker
28 feet below
655
00:38:17,740 --> 00:38:19,940
the Reich Chancellery in Berlin.
656
00:38:21,300 --> 00:38:24,060
Eva Braun followed him
two days later.
657
00:38:25,420 --> 00:38:28,900
Soviet artillery and American bombers
658
00:38:28,900 --> 00:38:31,100
had reduced the capital to a ruin.
659
00:38:32,220 --> 00:38:35,860
Berlin above ground is a moonscape.
It's horrific.
660
00:38:35,860 --> 00:38:39,580
Ordinary Berliners are living
a semi troglodyte existence.
661
00:38:43,340 --> 00:38:46,300
On March the 20th, Hitler came up
from the bunker
662
00:38:46,300 --> 00:38:48,500
to inspect a group of Hitler Youth.
663
00:38:49,980 --> 00:38:51,740
One boy wrote later
664
00:38:51,740 --> 00:38:54,100
that he couldn't believe this
"withered old man was
665
00:38:54,100 --> 00:38:57,100
"the visionary who had led
our nation to greatness."
666
00:39:03,220 --> 00:39:06,980
This is probably
the last photograph of Adolf Hitler.
667
00:39:08,180 --> 00:39:11,340
Standing with his adjutant,
Julius Schaub,
668
00:39:11,340 --> 00:39:15,660
in the ruins of the
Reich Chancellery in Berlin.
669
00:39:15,660 --> 00:39:17,460
The quality's not great.
670
00:39:17,460 --> 00:39:20,460
Gone are the formal portraits
of Hoffman,
671
00:39:20,460 --> 00:39:24,100
stylised, the tableaus
carefully arranged.
672
00:39:24,100 --> 00:39:26,940
Everything about this is chaotic.
673
00:39:26,940 --> 00:39:29,300
It's destruction all around him.
674
00:39:29,300 --> 00:39:33,820
It's bits of masonry hanging,
dangerously almost, above his head.
675
00:39:33,820 --> 00:39:36,180
And he's standing outside the door,
676
00:39:36,180 --> 00:39:39,180
looking at the destruction of
the Reich Chancellery
677
00:39:39,180 --> 00:39:41,460
with a sense, perhaps,
of resignation,
678
00:39:41,460 --> 00:39:43,500
perhaps still denial on his face,
679
00:39:43,500 --> 00:39:47,900
but also perhaps thinking,
"Yeah, I suspect this is it."
680
00:39:47,900 --> 00:39:50,500
He's sort of beyond anger now,
I think.
681
00:39:50,500 --> 00:39:52,100
He's beyond caring.
682
00:39:52,100 --> 00:39:53,980
I think he's just ready to go.
683
00:39:53,980 --> 00:39:57,420
He's ready to walk back into
that dark room behind him...
684
00:39:58,740 --> 00:40:00,540
..and into the ultimate darkness.
685
00:40:02,220 --> 00:40:04,780
By April 1945,
686
00:40:04,780 --> 00:40:08,100
Hitler had decided he would marry
Eva Braun,
687
00:40:08,100 --> 00:40:10,740
his secret mistress of 13 years.
688
00:40:12,420 --> 00:40:15,260
Hitler was very thankful to her
689
00:40:15,260 --> 00:40:17,940
when she came to him,
690
00:40:17,940 --> 00:40:20,220
to the burning Berlin,
691
00:40:20,220 --> 00:40:22,140
to the bunker,
692
00:40:22,140 --> 00:40:25,860
when all other Nazi leaders
fled the city
693
00:40:25,860 --> 00:40:28,060
to save their own lives.
694
00:40:29,260 --> 00:40:32,540
Eva Braun was the one who didn't
leave him,
695
00:40:32,540 --> 00:40:37,020
and therefore, he didn't want her
to die as a mistress.
696
00:40:39,500 --> 00:40:41,340
On the 30th of April,
697
00:40:41,340 --> 00:40:45,180
the Soviet Army reached
the Reichstag grounds.
698
00:40:45,180 --> 00:40:47,820
Hitler decided he would
commit suicide.
699
00:40:49,420 --> 00:40:52,420
His new wife would join him in death.
700
00:40:54,780 --> 00:40:57,420
He'd seen what had happened
to Mussolini,
701
00:40:57,420 --> 00:40:59,780
who had been captured
and then executed,
702
00:40:59,780 --> 00:41:02,940
and then his body had been hung up
and had been ridiculed.
703
00:41:02,940 --> 00:41:05,020
He didn't want this for himself.
704
00:41:05,020 --> 00:41:08,340
As always, he wanted to be the one
who was going to be in command,
705
00:41:08,340 --> 00:41:10,540
even of this, of his death.
706
00:41:13,940 --> 00:41:16,140
Eva Braun took a cyanide pill.
707
00:41:18,020 --> 00:41:21,620
Hitler also swallowed a pill
and then shot himself.
708
00:41:21,620 --> 00:41:23,300
GUNSHOT
709
00:41:27,260 --> 00:41:31,500
Their bodies were then taken out
to the Chancellery garden and burnt.
710
00:41:39,060 --> 00:41:43,380
On May the 8th 1945,
Germany surrendered.
711
00:41:44,580 --> 00:41:48,220
The victorious Allied soldiers
mocked the dead dictator.
712
00:41:49,580 --> 00:41:53,900
Hitler's portraits,
once venerated by millions,
713
00:41:53,900 --> 00:41:54,980
were destroyed.
714
00:41:58,300 --> 00:42:00,020
Heinrich Hoffmann,
715
00:42:00,020 --> 00:42:03,540
the man responsible for most of
those pictures, was arrested.
716
00:42:05,020 --> 00:42:08,700
But his extensive photo archive
was useful to the Allies.
717
00:42:11,660 --> 00:42:13,940
When the trials
of Nazi war criminals began
718
00:42:13,940 --> 00:42:16,220
at the end of 1945 in Nuremberg...
719
00:42:17,740 --> 00:42:21,540
..Hoffmann was given an office
to house his 40,000 negatives.
720
00:42:23,580 --> 00:42:28,940
If some officer there had
to interrogate a Nazi,
721
00:42:28,940 --> 00:42:32,500
he would first go to Hoffmann
and his little office
722
00:42:32,500 --> 00:42:34,380
and ask Hoffmann -
723
00:42:34,380 --> 00:42:39,980
a nice, elderly man, so he was
seen then - ask him,
724
00:42:39,980 --> 00:42:44,980
"Oh, do you have a photograph
of Heinrich Himmler or others?"
725
00:42:44,980 --> 00:42:50,140
And Hoffmann then would provide
these American officers
726
00:42:50,140 --> 00:42:55,140
and British officers
with pictures from Nazi officials.
727
00:42:57,580 --> 00:42:59,580
Once the trials were over,
728
00:42:59,580 --> 00:43:01,780
Hoffmann was released by the Allies.
729
00:43:03,060 --> 00:43:06,260
But Germans who had suffered
under the Nazis protested,
730
00:43:06,260 --> 00:43:07,500
and so he was tried...
731
00:43:08,980 --> 00:43:11,580
..accused of profiting
from the Nazi regime
732
00:43:11,580 --> 00:43:13,220
through his friendship with Hitler.
733
00:43:14,300 --> 00:43:17,420
Hoffmann was now the newsreel story.
734
00:43:19,220 --> 00:43:21,820
IN GERMAN:
735
00:43:27,500 --> 00:43:31,340
He never really understood
why he had to
736
00:43:31,340 --> 00:43:34,020
appear in front of a court
737
00:43:34,020 --> 00:43:36,300
because, in his view,
738
00:43:36,300 --> 00:43:38,660
he was only a photographer
739
00:43:38,660 --> 00:43:43,180
and he only documented
the Nazi party.
740
00:43:43,180 --> 00:43:45,940
He only documented what Hitler did,
741
00:43:45,940 --> 00:43:48,180
but he himself had nothing to do
with it.
742
00:43:49,460 --> 00:43:54,180
This was a classical argument
of very many artists,
743
00:43:54,180 --> 00:43:57,180
who were successful during
the Third Reich to say,
744
00:43:57,180 --> 00:44:00,020
"No, no, no, no.
We were just professionals.
745
00:44:00,020 --> 00:44:02,060
"I didn't believe in anything.
746
00:44:02,060 --> 00:44:04,420
"I just believed in my profession.
That's all.
747
00:44:04,420 --> 00:44:07,260
"But I'm not a Nazi.
I don't hate Jews. I'm innocent."
748
00:44:08,580 --> 00:44:12,300
Hoffmann was never, ever
just an observer.
749
00:44:12,300 --> 00:44:14,860
He was supporting
all these main ideas.
750
00:44:17,220 --> 00:44:20,220
With his propaganda photo-books
on display,
751
00:44:20,220 --> 00:44:23,780
the case against Hoffmann
was damning.
752
00:44:23,780 --> 00:44:26,300
IN GERMAN:
753
00:44:56,100 --> 00:45:00,420
Heinrich Hoffmann was sentenced
to four years in prison.
754
00:45:00,420 --> 00:45:04,740
He died a free man in 1957, aged 72.
755
00:45:09,540 --> 00:45:11,980
The power of film and photography
756
00:45:11,980 --> 00:45:14,740
was used by the Nazis
to terrible effect.
757
00:45:16,180 --> 00:45:20,420
Hitler unleashed terrors unmatched
in human history.
758
00:45:22,980 --> 00:45:24,820
Hitler was primarily responsible for
759
00:45:24,820 --> 00:45:27,220
the launching of World War II
in Europe,
760
00:45:27,220 --> 00:45:31,620
and it's a conflict that costs
tens of millions of lives.
761
00:45:31,620 --> 00:45:33,980
It's the most costly war in
world history.
762
00:45:42,660 --> 00:45:45,260
On top of that, Hitler's regime,
the Third Reich,
763
00:45:45,260 --> 00:45:47,900
carries out
an unprecedented genocide
764
00:45:47,900 --> 00:45:52,300
against the Jews of Europe,
6 million of whom are shot,
765
00:45:52,300 --> 00:45:55,220
gassed, industrially slaughtered
in many places
766
00:45:55,220 --> 00:45:57,660
in the concentration camps,
in the death camps,
767
00:45:57,660 --> 00:45:59,860
and in the killing fields
of Occupied Europe.
768
00:46:01,500 --> 00:46:05,420
Nobody really has that
emotional power that Hitler had.
769
00:46:05,420 --> 00:46:09,060
Nobody really caused
the vast destruction
770
00:46:09,060 --> 00:46:11,100
and death that Hitler caused.
771
00:46:11,100 --> 00:46:15,500
He's become this sort of symbol
of evil in our imagination.
772
00:46:15,500 --> 00:46:19,740
He is the personification
of that barbarism.
773
00:46:21,100 --> 00:46:25,500
And we naively expect to
find answers in his face.
63845
Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.