
In Our Nazi, we are plunged into a situation we barely, and only slowly, understand: the filming of Thomas Harlan’s experimental feature Wundkanal (1984), in which true-life ex-SS officer Alfred Filbert, now very old, is ‘put on trial’ for the camera, without him suspecting what is to come or why he is really there. Kramer’s confronting film is an essay about the sticky complicity of everyone present at this event, each bringing their own history, their own political ideology, their own desires to take revenge, to seek redemption or compassion, or just to put their heads down and ‘get the job done’ professionally, or (in the case of Filbert) to be a star, a part of the magnificent, magical, seductive world of cinema, even if it kills him.
Crew
Recommendations
view all
Anselm

McQueen

Public Speaking

Night Will Fall

Eldorado: Everything the Nazis Hate

Directed by John Ford

Sidney

Casting By

A Plastic Ocean

The Godfather Family: A Look Inside

The Class of ‘92

Evil Influencer: The Jodi Hildebrandt Story

Ex Libris: The New York Public Library

Seduced and Abandoned

Fuck

As I Was Moving Ahead, Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty

The Curious Birth of Benjamin Button

Naqoyqatsi

Marwencol

Champs



