

Warlord
Episode 104 | 47m 1sVideo has Closed Captions
After the humiliation of the First World War, Hitler was determined to crush all dissent.
After the humiliation of the First World War, Hitler was determined to crush communism and create "Lebensraum," or living space for Germany. His ambition drove him to war in a bid for German global domination. But what he created ultimately led to his downfall and one of the greatest disasters the world has ever seen, much of it captured on film.
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Hitler: A Life in Pictures is presented by your local public television station.

Warlord
Episode 104 | 47m 1sVideo has Closed Captions
After the humiliation of the First World War, Hitler was determined to crush communism and create "Lebensraum," or living space for Germany. His ambition drove him to war in a bid for German global domination. But what he created ultimately led to his downfall and one of the greatest disasters the world has ever seen, much of it captured on film.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship♪♪ -Adolf Hitler.
-He is the architect of one of the greatest disasters the world has ever seen.
-The most photographed leader of the early 20th century.
-He spent hours in front of a mirror practicing different poses.
Every photo is a performance.
-Hitler was photographed from boyhood to the Blitzkrieg... -He wants to be at the front.
He wants to share the excitement.
He wants to smell the cordite.
-...to the bunker.
These images reveal the secrets of Hitler's inner life and the people he led.
-Hitler comes in, and he tells you you are important.
He tells you he has a plan, and he tells you he knows what's gone wrong, and he can fix it.
-Featuring rarely seen and newly digitized images.
This is the story of the rise and fall of Adolf Hitler, picture by picture, frame by frame.
-I think Hitler created an image of political celebrity that never existed before.
The manipulation of media, the presentation of himself, you can draw a line from that to what film and rock stars are doing today.
♪♪ ♪♪ -September 1939.
After six years in power, Hitler launches his Blitzkrieg, the Lightning War.
Tens of thousands of troops pour into Poland.
His tanks and planes smash cities and towns.
-The Poles actually fight very gamely against the Germans, but they are outnumbered, outgunned, out-thought.
-Hitler traveled to the front line, deliberately putting himself close to the action.
-He could have been exposed potentially to a Polish air attack or to Polish sniper.
And there's an element to which I suppose he's very enthused by this war that he's unleashed.
And, of course, he wants to be seen by his troops.
So there's a lot of images from that period of him driving through masses of German troops, all of whom want to touch their supreme warlord.
-Hitler believed his experience in the Bavarian army had made him a master tactician.
-Hitler very much turned to his own experiences in the First World War in figuring out on how to win the war.
He would then often override decisions of his generals and say, "You have no idea what war is really like.
I experienced things in the trenches.
I know what war is like.
Therefore, we need to do this and that."
-Hitler had a fanatical desire to make Germany a world superpower.
♪♪ He'd never disguised his ambition for war.
It had been in plain sight in the pages of his political memoir and manifesto from 1924, "Mein Kampf."
-He talks about expansion.
He talks about lebensraum, living space.
You know, he doesn't see the German people as being restricted to the existing borders of Germany.
He sees Germany getting bigger and bigger and bigger.
-On the very first page of "Mein Kampf," Hitler stated that Germany and his homeland of Austria should be united.
"People of the same blood should be in the same Reich."
♪♪ On the 12th of March, 1938, 14 years after writing those words, columns of German troops marched across the border into Austria.
♪♪ Heinrich Hoffmann, Hitler's official photographer, produced numerous photo books promoting the cult of the Fuehrer, including, in 1938, a record of the Anschluss, or Union, with Austria, "Hitler in His Homeland."
-The photography itself is quite remarkably clear and vivid and lucid.
But what they do is show the progression.
They show the entry through the barriers, through the gates, and we follow Hitler on his journey through Austria, which is a kind of scenic heritage tour.
♪♪ We have really what is obviously the messiah of a secular religion.
Hoffmann, as he often does, is creating a symbolic image.
Hitler is the still center of a vortex of utter ecstasy, where the people really become maddened with a kind of euphoria.
-The book has minimal text.
For the Nazis, the image was everything.
-There are tiny, little subtitles.
No one's going to read those.
It is a visual feast.
And in other words, they get, mid-20th century almost, this extraordinary evolution from a verbal to a visual culture.
They've got it.
And it's truly, I think, frightening, but also very clever, how they understand the language of the visual is so much more powerful than verbal language.
♪♪ -Behind the propaganda was a darker side to the Anschluss with Austria.
An American named Ross Baker, who was living in Vienna with his family, filmed Hitler's arrival in the capital... ♪♪ ...and the anti-Semitic boycotts and attacks that immediately followed.
-What I think is really interesting about those films is that they're Americans.
And most of the footage that we have from that period is of either Nazi families, Germans who were observers at these events.
But the films of the Anschluss taken by Americans I think is really interesting, because they are on the outside looking in, and they recognized what a massive thing this is.
-Ross filmed his wife, Helen's, anger at being turned away from a Jewish store by a member of the S.A. ♪♪ -They were fearless.
The images show their fearlessness.
♪♪ -After Austria, Hitler's next target was the German-speaking area of Czechoslovakia known as the Sudetenland.
However, the Western democracies like Britain and France were desperate to avoid another European war.
A peace deal had to be struck.
-They'd lived through the First World War.
They'd seen the carnage that it had created.
There wasn't a family in Britain who hadn't been bereaved by the First World War.
And they really didn't want this to happen again.
-"We're going to hope for the best, and we're going to let Germany have what it lost.
Why not?
That makes sense.
Those bits of Austria and Czechoslovakia, the Sudetenland, they're German, are they not?"
-On the 15th of September, 1938, the British Prime minister, Neville Chamberlain, flew to Munich to discuss the issue of the Sudetenland with Hitler.
♪♪ -The body language in this image from Munich in 1938 speaks volumes.
First of all, let's just look at Neville Chamberlain, the British prime minister on the left.
He looks anxious.
He's wanting Hitler's attention.
He's fiddling with his hand, with his cuffs.
It's someone trying to take control of the situation and trying to be composed, trying to keep together.
But now compare that expression with that of Hitler.
He's not really listening to what Chamberlain's saying.
He'll just say anything to get rid of this old man in the room.
"Yeah, he can have his agreement.
But you know what?
I'm going to break it."
♪♪ -In the Munich Agreement of September 1938, Czechoslovakia was forced to give up the Sudetenland.
Hitler the warlord wanted more.
The following March, he seized the rest of Czechoslovakia.
Poland was next in his crosshairs.
Realizing Hitler could no longer be appeased, Britain and France promised to defend the Poles.
♪♪ To ensure he wouldn't also be attacked from the East, Hitler made a non-aggression pact with the leader of the Soviet Union, Stalin.
They also secretly agreed to carve up Poland between them.
-The Nazis and the Communists hated each other.
They'd been at each other's throats all the way through the 1920s and '30s.
There had been battles in the streets in Berlin.
So the idea of them forming some sort of pact with one another was seemingly ridiculous.
I mean, nobody saw it coming.
-Let's spool back to that image of Hitler in 1914 celebrating war being declared on Russia.
That's the same man who's now cutting a deal with the Russians?
To so many, it does not add up.
He is pragmatic.
He knows that unless he does a deal with Stalin, he's not going to get the free hand in the countries to the east of Germany that Hitler is so desperate to acquire.
He knows that if he doesn't do this deal, he won't be able to get away with what he wants to achieve.
-Hitler was fascinated by Stalin.
As part of the delegation to Moscow to sign the pact, Hitler sent his old friend and official photographer Heinrich Hoffmann to be his eyes and ears.
♪♪ -So he sends Hoffmann to Moscow effectively as a spy to have a good look at Stalin, which is in itself quite remarkable.
He was someone that wasn't particularly seen very often actually in sort of Soviet newsreels.
He was someone slightly in the background.
He thought Stalin was quite fascinating, not least because of what he had achieved in the Soviet Union.
-Hoffmann's work as a propagandist for Hitler was well known to Stalin.
After the signing, the Soviet leader proposed a toast in broken German, wishing him a long life.
-And then Hoffmann goes back after the signature of the treaty, and they have this session together when Hitler and Hoffmann go through the photographs.
Hitler's very disappointed that he sees a photograph of Stalin smoking, for example.
He considers smoking to be absolutely abhorrent and a signifier of a decadent personality.
-Hoffmann dutifully removed Stalin's cigarette from all the official German pictures of the signing.
With Starling off his back, Hitler was now free to attack Poland.
♪♪ The non-aggression pact with Stalin was a political coup.
But Hitler needed a reason to take on the Poles, a way for Germany to look the innocent victim of Polish aggression.
If no genuine grievance could be found, a con trick would do.
-He gets this from Heinrich Himmler and Reinhard Heydrich, at the S.S. who come up with this idea of staging a false flag operation.
-On the evening of the 31st of August, 1939, S.S. men dressed in Polish uniforms staged a raid on a radio transmitter at the German town of Gleiwitz, close to the border.
They tied up the staff and then broadcast a message urging Poles living in Germany to rebel.
-The way that they sell to the world that this was a Polish attack is by leaving a Polish corpse at the site.
-The man chosen by the S.S. was 43-year-old Franciszek Honiok.
Franciszek would become the Second World War's first casualty.
-He was an ethnic Pole living in German Upper Silesia, and he was known within that German province as something of a pro-Polish firebrand.
And he was someone who was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
He was arrested about two days before the Gleiwitz incident, brought to the site already drugged, already incoherent.
He is shot, and his body is left at the site.
And he is there solely as proof that this was an attack by Polish irregulars.
But he's entirely innocent.
-Hitler had his excuse.
♪♪ The following morning, the 1st of September, 1939, Germany invades Poland.
-Hitler makes a very solemn speech to the German Reichstag in which he opens his speech by saying, "Since 4:45 a.m., we are firing back."
And he cites the Gleiwitz incident as evidence of Polish aggression.
This is his reason for going to war.
And poor old Honiok was the man that carried the can for that.
♪♪ -It was called Blitzkrieg.
It was called Lightning War.
And within weeks, Hitler's in Warsaw.
♪♪ -The Germans fought a ruthless and bloody war.
-There was an almost wanton targeting of Polish civilian populations, of Polish P.O.W.s, Polish Jews particularly, as well.
And within that five-week period of that military campaign, it's been estimated there are over 600 massacres carried out by German forces.
♪♪ -Most of the propaganda photographs in Poland were taken by Heinrich Hoffmann.
♪♪ Hitler also brought with him a film cameraman named Walter Frentz to provide footage for German cinema newsreels.
Frentz always traveled with a lightweight Leica camera to grab photographs for his own personal collection.
This rarely seen picture was taken on a plane on the way to the Polish front.
-Now, this is a very gentle photograph, an intimate picture of Hitler, really.
We don't see many like that.
For me, as a photographer who's been on the road with many a politician, it's something about the intimacy, the fact that we've got him relaxed, taken on the Q.T.
with a Leica.
Hitler wouldn't have heard the camera go off.
It would just be a very gentle click.
But for me, the disturbing thing about this -- This is the day he's off to Poland in a plane where many Jews and many Poles were killed.
And it's the contrast between the gentleness of this picture and the atrocity of what happened in Poland is stunning.
A gentle picture of a disturbing man.
♪♪ -It was Walter Frentz who nine months later filmed this remarkable piece of footage, Hitler dancing with joy as he received the news that France had surrendered.
The country had capitulated to the Nazis in just six weeks.
By then, Denmark, Norway, Belgium, and Holland had also fallen and the British humiliated at Dunkirk.
♪♪ -There's something kind of almost sort of Tiggerish and charming about it.
I'm not wishing to give him any positive attributes at all, but there is something very natural about it.
And that's very rare for Hitler, 'cause so much of his imagery is very, very tightly controlled, and suddenly he's dancing a little jig.
It's not very grown up, but he can't contain himself.
♪♪ -On the 22nd of June, Hitler and his generals assembled in the forest of Compiegne outside Paris to sign the French surrender.
Hoffmann and friends were there to capture the historic moment.
-22nd of June.
Sweet revenge, indeed.
The symbolism of Compiegne is that that is where the armistice in 1918 is signed.
When the French are firmly in control, they're making the Germans sign a surrender.
They're humiliating the Germans.
So when the tables are turned, Hitler insists that they go back to Compiegne to sign the new armistice, with the French having to hand over power.
And he insists on signing the agreement in the same train carriage that they'd used for the First World War.
And not only that, he takes the train carriage out of the museum where it's housed and puts it in the exact spot where it had been in 1918 just to rub it in.
And then when he goes in, he sits down in the chair that the French generals had sat in 22 years earlier.
So he's really rubbing it in.
It's a real moment of humiliation for the French.
♪♪ -Hitler spent the next few days sightseeing in France.
♪♪ Together with old comrades, he visited the battlefields of Flanders, where they'd served in the First World War.
Then on the 23rd of June, early in the morning, Hitler arrived in triumph in Paris.
Accompanied by architect Albert Speer and sculptor Arno Baker, Hitler was photographed by Hoffmann in front of the Eiffel Tower.
Walter Frentz filmed at the Fuhrer's feet.
-The Eiffel Tower is really a symbol of France.
It's a symbol of France and French power and French technology.
And suddenly, we have a photograph of Hitler standing in front of it.
It belongs to him.
He's taken over.
The whole of the French economy, the French idea of power, the French government, it's all now under Hitler's control.
♪♪ -Speer and Baker were later removed by Hoffmann to make Hitler the focus of the cover of his best-selling collection of photos with Hitler in the West.
As Hitler and his generals walked away, Hoffmann took another iconic photograph.
-Now, the quality of this picture is superb.
The strength of the uniforms, the contrast between the sky and the blackness of the uniforms and this emblematic Eiffel Tower.
The photograph is taken by the photographer going backwards slowly.
He would have set it up.
You don't get these pictures by accident.
He would have framed the top of the tower.
He would have said, "Walk towards me," and he would have backed off and backed off until the framing is right, 'cause that picture would be nothing if it was cut in half.
This picture would have gone around the world, would have been on the front covers of newspapers in America, Russia, and it would have been a very, very powerful document.
-At that moment, total victory in Europe seemed in Hitler's grasp.
[ Crowd cheering ] ♪♪ By the summer of 1940, Hitler had rewritten history and avenged the humiliation of Germany's defeat in 1918.
-Within a year, he had achieved everything that Imperial Germany had failed to achieve in four years in the First World War.
He had succeeded beyond even his own wildest dream.
And this actually feeds into Hitler's own sense of his own abilities, inflated sense of his own abilities.
It feeds his own narcissism that he's the greatest military leader of all time.
♪♪ -With Western Europe now occupied by his troops, Hitler's pact with Stalin had served its purpose.
In December 1940, he issued a directive to the army, the Wehrmacht, to prepare for the invasion of the Soviet Union.
He believed a swift victory was inevitable.
-Hitler famously said, "All you have to do is kick the door, and the whole rotten structure will come tumbling down."
-On June 22, 1941, the invasion, code-named Operation Barbarossa, began.
-Hitler's invasion of the Soviet Union to a large extent is the defining military moment of the war.
This is the defining conflict.
♪♪ -The scale of the attack on the Soviet Union was unlike anything that has been seen before or since.
This is 1,000 miles of front.
It stretches all the way from the Baltic down to the Black Sea.
They've got 3 1/2 million men in their armies fighting.
They have to have that many men because there are 5 million Soviet soldiers facing them.
They've got 3,000 tanks, 4,000 planes, 600,000 armored vehicles.
I mean, just the sheer scale of this is beyond imagination.
[ Air raid sirens wailing ] -This time, Hitler doesn't go to the fast-moving front line.
Instead, he is filmed and photographed at his field headquarters, giving the German public the reassurance that the conqueror of France is in control.
-He just -- He pores over maps and discusses tactics with generals, and of course, they always still regard him in the back of their minds as, you know, Hitler's still this sort of corporal.
And I think they still find it very militarily difficult to deal with this man who is obviously so much more militarily junior than they are.
He sees himself as a master tactician.
He's simply not.
♪♪ -Operation Barbarossa failed.
The Germans were poorly equipped for the Russian winter.
Their tanks broke down, and supply lines were stretched.
While they made territorial gains, the Wehrmacht suffered half a million casualties in the first three months alone.
-Stalin is able to call upon what seems like an infinite number of men and indeed women.
Women are put on the front line in a way that, you know, simply weren't done at the time anywhere else.
It's just ultimately size, weather, bad mechanization, and Soviet manpower.
-Germany's inability to defeat the Soviets was a turning point in the war.
♪♪ On December the 7, 1941, Japan shocked the world by attacking Pearl Harbor.
Hitler immediately supported his ally in the East and declared war on the United States.
-In some ways, it's understandable, because America was already really on the side of Britain.
They were supplying Britain already.
But there's a big difference between getting supplies from the United States and getting their Air Force, their Navy, and their massive Army over to Europe, as well.
Once you're ranged against all of that military power and all of that economic might, Germany's fate was sealed.
♪♪ -For Hitler, the war was all-consuming.
He became increasingly hidden from his people.
In 1942, he gave just five public speeches.
Photo opportunities were few and far between.
-Hitler actually becomes much more reclusive.
He much more concerns himself with the affairs of the war.
That's his sort of primary job.
That's what he sees as his primary job.
-He makes very few public appearances, but the old, you might say, archive of images that had been generated between really 1926 already all the way up to '39, '40, that are still very alive, that is reproduced of course.
So the cult of Hitler, the myth of Hitler, is kept alive through images, even though he himself has withdrawn to his headquarters.
So he remains present in the German imagination through those earlier images, and they keep the Fuehrer cult alive.
♪♪ -Hitler spent most of his time in his field headquarters or at the Berghof, his Bavarian mountain retreat.
This photograph was taken at the Berghof in 1942.
♪♪ -First of all, it's a really badly taken picture.
It's kind of badly lit.
It feels very sort of stilted.
They're in what looks like a kind of ghastly sort of basic room doing this Hitler salute to no one in particular.
This is Walter Frentz, and he is documenting everything.
You can perhaps detect an uneasiness on their expressions.
This is 1942.
Things aren't going smoothly necessarily on the Russian front.
Actually, some of these men, they look tired.
It may be because the picture was taken very late at night.
Hitler loved staying up late.
But these men don't look happy, do they?
They look nervous, blank.
I think they look wary.
And it's all been captured on film.
-When this photograph was taken, 250 million people in Europe were under Nazi control.
In those occupied territories, a race war was being waged -- the extermination of their Jewish inhabitants.
In Poland, hundreds of thousands of Jews were herded into small, overcrowded ghettos.
Jewish photographers were hired by the Jewish ghetto administrations to record life there.
♪♪ -They created photographic records of work that was going on in workshops and small factories that were presented to the Nazi authorities.
And this was really part of an effort by the ghetto administration to prevent prisoners in the ghetto from an even worse fate.
They thought that by showing that the ghetto was a place of useful production, it would prevent the authorities from murdering the inhabitants.
-Henryk Ross was a Jewish photographer working in the Lodz ghetto in Poland.
He secretly took photographs of the brutality of life there to be preserved for posterity.
-Many people think the only real form of resistance is armed resistance, but put you into the position of someone in the ghetto.
It's very difficult to get hold of a gun.
It's almost impossible.
Another form of resistance which developed within those organizations -- to document what was going on, to collect documents, to hide them somewhere, and hope that after the war, somebody will come back and prove what had happened.
And taking picture belongs in this category of resistance, to form an archive.
And to build up an archive was seen as resistance, because it's about building up a memory.
"This is who we are."
-On the surface, a lot of them look harmless.
They look intimate, lovely portraits of individuals.
And we might say that they don't show us the horrors of life in the ghettos, or at least not the full extent.
But I think it's incredibly important that we look at these images now, because people don't want to be portrayed by the perpetrators as the passive helpless victims.
They want to be portrayed as the people who love their children, who have dignity, who still have their individuality.
And that is how they want to be remembered.
-In 1944, Ross buried his pictures in metal canisters and returned a year later to retrieve them once the Soviet Red Army had liberated Poland.
-They're heartbreaking.
It's very difficult to look at these pictures.
They're all heartbreaking.
-I particularly love Ross' picture of a woman kissing her child.
It's not only such a touching moment of humanity and love, it's also something about the physical quality of the image which was hidden in the ground.
And if you look closely, you can see that the edges of the image have been damaged, where the damp has eaten into the negative.
So the image itself bears a kind of physical trace of that history of being hidden and later being excavated.
And I think it's really crucial to remember when we look at photographs from the Nazi period that the picture-perfect shot is almost always the perpetrator shot.
It's only the perpetrators who are in that privileged position of power where they have access to the perfect photographic standpoint, to the perfect photographic equipment, to the labs, to the development facilities, and so forth.
So if we're looking for a good picture, we're looking for the perpetrator image.
The pictures by Henryk Ross are so important precisely because they show the immense difficulty, the enormous risk that people took to create them and then to hide them... the unlikely story of their survival.
♪♪ -By early 1944, the Allies were winning the conflict.
Their troops were pushing up through Italy, the Japanese were retreating across the Pacific, and the Russians were slowly advancing towards Germany.
♪♪ Capturing Hitler and ending the Nazi nightmare finally looked possible.
There were fears that Hitler might try to flee Germany in disguise.
Using a Heinrich Hoffmann portrait from the 1930s, the New York Times commissioned a leading Hollywood makeup artist to create different looks to show how Hitler might change himself.
♪♪ Hitler monitored the war from the Berghof, his mountain retreat.
-Life on the Berghof in the war didn't change at all.
They had the same routine.
Hitler got up late.
He had the same circle of friends around him.
The only difference was that now he had his daily and nightly meetings with his generals.
-Hitler and his inner circle loved watching the cinefilms his girlfriend, Eva Braun, had taken before the war and reminiscing about the past.
Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels wrote in his diary that it was like "the good old days."
♪♪ They were living in a dream world.
♪♪ ♪♪ On June the 6th, 1944, the long awaited invasion of Northern Europe began.
D-Day.
In 24 hours, over 60,000 personnel and 9,000 vehicles were brought ashore at Normandy.
A 50-mile beachhead was secured.
-It's obvious how the war is going to end now.
Everybody knows that Germany's going to lose the war.
The generals all know.
It's just what to do about it.
And whilst Hitler is in control, they know that there's really nothing they can do about it but fight.
So what does that mean your attitude towards the leadership's going to be?
-This picture's really fascinating because you can see Hitler pictured almost right next to the man who wants to kill him.
There are a lot of people in the world at the time who wanted to kill Hitler, but this man on the left of this photograph has a really good chance of doing so.
It's sort of great that this picture exists, because it sort of captures the imminent drama of what's going to happen.
-The officer is 36-year-old Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg.
A war briefing is about to take place in a conference room at Hitler's HQ in East Prussia called the wolf's lair.
Stauffenberg was initially supportive of the war but became appalled by the brutality of the regime.
♪♪ He and his co-conspirators had bigger plans than just assassination of their leader.
He would lead a coup and seize power.
-It wasn't enough for the German resistance, particularly the military resistance, to merely kill Hitler, because that just means that Germany collapses.
And they don't want that, 'cause that just means that the Third Reich will end, and communism will sweep through, and you'll have a Bolshevik Germany.
They don't want that.
-Minutes after this photograph was taken, Hitler and Stauffenberg took their seats around the conference table.
Immediately, Stauffenberg made an excuse and departed, leaving behind his briefcase containing explosives and a timer.
He then flew to Berlin to coordinate resistance efforts there.
[ Timer ticking ] [ Explosion ] [ Glass breaking ] But the briefcase was moved.
When the bomb exploded, a table leg blocked the full force of the blast.
His uniform was shredded, but Hitler survived with minor injuries.
-Hitler's okay, and so are all the generals.
As soon as that happens, as soon as Hitler is alive, the coup's going to fail.
-Stauffenberg and the other key conspirators were caught and shot by firing squad that evening.
[ Gunshot ] 200 were hanged after a show trial.
A few days after the attempt on his life, Hitler was pictured visiting the injured.
♪♪ -It was represented as an act of providence, Hitler's deliverance.
The propaganda machine went into overdrive, and also, of course, you had massive sympathy for Hitler.
♪♪ -By the end of 1944, Germany's borders had been breached to the east and the west.
The Allies were closing in.
Yet the Germans fought on.
-Why did the German people remain so attached to Hitler and the idea of national socialism till the bitter end?
Why did they continue to fight?
July 1943, the Americans and the British invade Sicily.
Italian fascism collapses within a few months.
Mussolini is ousted.
So in Italy, there was much less of an attachment to the Duce than there was in Germany to Hitler.
And I think the fact that Hitler preserved his hold over the German collective psyche for so much longer has a lot to do with film, photography, and the very rich imagery that the Nazis create before '33, but especially after '33, turning Hitler into a charismatic leader.
♪♪ -On January the 16th, 1945, Hitler retreated to his bunker 28 feet below the Reich Chancellery in Berlin.
Eva Braun followed him two days later.
Soviet artillery and American bombers had reduced the capital to a ruin.
-Berlin above ground is a moonscape.
It's horrific.
Ordinary Berliners are living a sort of semi-troglodyte existence.
♪♪ -On March the 20th, Hitler came up from the bunker to inspect a group of Hitler Youth.
One boy wrote later that he "couldn't believe this withered old man was the visionary who had led our nation to greatness."
♪♪ -This is probably the last photograph of Adolf Hitler, standing with his adjutant, Julius Schaub, in the ruins of the Reich Chancellery in Berlin.
-The quality's not great.
Gone are the formal portraits of Hoffmann, stylized, the tableaus carefully arranged.
Everything about this is chaotic.
It's destruction all around him.
It's bits of masonry hanging dangerously, almost, above his head.
And he's standing outside the door looking at the destruction of the Reich Chancellery with a sense perhaps of resignation, perhaps still denial in his face, but also perhaps thinking, "Yeah, I suspect this is it."
He's sort of beyond anger now, I think.
He's beyond caring.
I think he's just ready to go.
He's ready to walk back into that dark room behind him and into the ultimate darkness.
-By April 1945, Hitler had decided he would marry Eva Braun, his secret mistress of 13 years.
-Hitler was very thankful to her when she came to him to the burning Berlin, to the bunker when all other Nazi leaders fled the city to save their own lives.
Eva Braun was the one who didn't leave him, and, therefore, he didn't want her to die as a mistress.
-On the 30th of April, the Soviet army reached the Reichstag grounds.
Hitler decided he would commit suicide.
His new wife would join him in death.
♪♪ -He'd seen what had happened to Mussolini, who had been captured and then executed, and then his body had been hung up and had been ridiculed.
He didn't want this for himself.
As always, he wanted to be the one who was going to be in command of even this, of his death.
♪♪ -Eva Braun took a cyanide pill.
Hitler also swallowed a pill and then shot himself.
[ Gunshot ] ♪♪ Their bodies were then taken out to the chancellery garden and burnt.
♪♪ On May the 8th, 1945, Germany surrendered.
The victorious Allied soldiers mocked the dead dictator.
Hitler's portraits, once venerated by millions, were destroyed.
♪♪ Heinrich Hoffmann, the man responsible for most of those pictures, was arrested, but his extensive photo archive was useful to the Allies.
♪♪ When the trials of Nazi war criminals began at the end of 1945 in Nuremberg, Hoffmann was given an office to house his 40,000 negatives.
-If some officer there had to interrogate a Nazi, he would first go to Hoffmann and his little office and ask Hoffmann, a nice elderly man, so he was seen then, ask him, "Oh, do you have a photograph of Heinrich Himmler?"
or others.
And Hoffmann then would provide these American officers and British officers with pictures from Nazi officials.
-Once the trials were over, Hoffmann was released by the Allies.
But Germans who had suffered under the Nazis protested.
And so he was tried, accused of profiting from the Nazi regime through his friendship with Hitler.
Hoffmann was now the newsreel story.
-[ Speaking in German ] -He never really understood why he had to appear in front of a court, because in his view, he was only a photographer, and he only documented the Nazi party.
He only documented what Hitler did.
But he himself had nothing to do with it.
-This was a classical argument of very many artists who were successful during the Third Reich to say, "No, no, no, no, we were just professionals.
I didn't believe in anything.
I just believe in my profession, that's all.
But I'm not a Nazi.
I don't hate Jews.
I'm innocent."
Hoffmann was never, ever just an observer.
He was supporting all these main ideas.
-With his propaganda photo books on display, the case against Hoffmann was damning.
-[ Speaking in German ] -Heinrich Hoffmann was sentenced to four years in prison.
He died a free man in 1957, aged 72.
♪♪ The power of film and photography was used by the Nazis to terrible effect.
Hitler unleashed terrors unmatched in human history.
♪♪ -Hitler was primarily responsible for the launching of World War II in Europe, and it's a conflict that costs tens of millions of lives.
It's the most costly war in world history.
[ Plane engines roaring ] ♪♪ On top of that, Hitler's regime, the Third Reich, carries out an unprecedented genocide against the Jews of Europe, 6 million of whom are shot, gassed, industrially slaughtered in many places, in the concentration camps, in the death camps, and in the killing fields of occupied Europe.
-Nobody really has that emotional power that Hitler had.
Nobody really caused the vast destruction and death that Hitler caused.
He's become this sort of symbol of evil in our imagination.
-He is the personification of that barbarism.
And we naively expect to find answers in his face.
♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪
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