
The ''
Why We Fight'' Series depicts the Nazi propaganda machine.
:''For the production company see
Propaganda Films''
A 'propaganda film' is a
film, either a
documentary-style production or a fictional screenplay, that is produced to convince the viewer of a certain political point or influence the opinions or behavior of people, often by providing deliberately misleading,
propagandistic content.
History
One of the early fictional films to be used for propaganda was ''
The Birth of a Nation'', although it was not produced for the purposes of indoctrination. In
1918,
Charlie Chaplin made, at his own expense, ''
The Bond'', a
comedic propaganda film for
World War I. In the years following the
October Revolution of
1917, the
Soviet government sponsored the
Russian film industry with the purpose of making propaganda films.
The development of Russian cinema in the
1920s by such
filmmakers as
Dziga Vertov and
Sergei Eisenstein saw considerable progress in the use of the motion picture as a propaganda tool, yet it also served to develop the art of moviemaking. Eisenstein's films, in particular ''
The Battleship Potemkin'', are seen as masterworks of the cinema, even as they glorify Eisenstein's
Communist ideals.
The
1930s and
1940s, which saw the rise of
totalitarian states and the
Second World War, are arguably the "Golden Age of Propaganda". During this time
Leni Riefenstahl, a filmmaker working in
Nazi Germany, created what is arguably the greatest propaganda movie of all time: ''
Triumph of the Will'', a film commissioned by
Hitler to chronicle the
1934 Nazi Party rally in
Nuremberg. Despite its controversial subject, the film is still recognized today for its
influential revolutionary approaches to using
music and
cinematography.
In the United States during
World War II, filmmaker
Frank Capra created a seven-part series of films to support the war effort entitled ''
Why We Fight.'' This series is considered a highlight of the propaganda film genre. Other propaganda movies, such as ''
Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo'' and ''
Casablanca'', have become so well-loved by film viewers that they can stand on their own as dramatic films, apart from their original role as propaganda vehicles.
[1]
Many of the dramatic
war films in the early
1940s in the
United States were designed to create a
patriotic mindset and
convince viewers that sacrifices needed to be made to defeat "the enemy." One of the conventions of the
genre was to depict a
racial and
socioeconomic cross-section of the United States, either a
platoon on the front lines or soldiers training on a
base, which come together to fight for the good of the country. In
Italy, at the same time,
film directors like
Roberto Rossellini produced propaganda films for similar purposes.
During the
1960s, the United States produced propaganda films that cheerily instructed civilians how to build homemade
fallout shelters, to protect themselves in the event of
nuclear war.
For more discussion of propaganda and some examples of it in
short films from the
United States, see the 10-volume
CD-ROM collection ''Our Secret Century''. For a satirical subversion of the United States military's 1960s propaganda regarding the safety of
radioactive materials, see ''
The Atomic Cafe''.
External links
★
Prelinger Archives: from the
Internet Archive, collection of
World War II and
Cold War-era American
sponsored films of the
1940s,
1950s, and
1960s (many of which can be classified as propaganda)
★
★ ''
Duck and Cover''
(link)
★
★ ''
Don't Be a Sucker!''
(link)
★
★ ''
My Japan''
(link)
★
★ ''
Perversion for Profit''
(link)
★
★ ''
Red Chinese Battle Plan''
★
★ ''
Propaganda Filmmaker: Make Your Own Propaganda Film
★
★ ''
Propagandacritic Video Gallery