Suggested material for Adof fans
Maybe something by David Irving or Nick Griffin perhaps??
Seriously though (apart from the excellent 'Downfall' DVD):
'Fatherland' by Richard Harris - also 'Archangel' for Josef (Stalin) fans by the same author.
Both highly recommended.
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Reply to: Hitler Book
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Previously on "Hitler Book"
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Originally posted by rootsnall View PostI would of gone for using a dummy for the frames in which the house is actually falling.
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Originally posted by zeitghostThe trickery in the house thing being carefully measuring where the window would be...
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Originally posted by KathyWoolfe View PostTrigonometry would help here.
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Originally posted by zeitghostThe trickery in the house thing being carefully measuring where the window would be...
All you have to do is ask the nearest trigonom
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Originally posted by rootsnall View PostIt was all a myth !
To be honest I know bog all about it but I suspect the 'do their own stunts' was part of the publicity when selling the film at the time. If you were Keaton or Lloyd and running a business ( a real one ! ) why risk your neck needlessly if you could employ a bit of trickery instead.
Keaton and Lloyd were involved in the early days of motion pictures. They developed many of the techniques used in later films.
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Originally posted by Moose423956 View PostI think the most amazing thing was how they used to do their own stunts. Like the Keaton one where the house falls down and he's not hurt because he "goes through" an open window. Or Harold Lloyd hanging from a clockface. No CGI involved there.
Now someone will tell me it was all a myth.
To be honest I know bog all about it but I suspect the 'do their own stunts' was part of the publicity when selling the film at the time. If you were Keaton or Lloyd and running a business ( a real one ! ) why risk your neck needlessly if you could employ a bit of trickery instead.
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Originally posted by Moose423956 View PostI think the most amazing thing was how they used to do their own stunts. Like the Keaton one where the house falls down and he's not hurt because he "goes through" an open window. Or Harold Lloyd hanging from a clockface. No CGI involved there.
Now someone will tell me it was all a myth.
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Originally posted by KathyWoolfe View PostI think that Chaplin's films are quite entertaining but for that era in the history of film I prefer watching Buster Keaton. his antics and deadpan expression are priceless.
Now someone will tell me it was all a myth.
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Originally posted by Ruprect View PostI find his films about as funny as getting an arrow through the neck and discovering there's a gas bill tied to it.
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I second The Great Dictator*. There's also a Don Delillo novel about a filmstrip of Hitler in his bunker doing a Charlie Chaplin impression - can't remember which one it is, maybe Mao II or Running Dog
"Hitler-Stalin: Parallel Lives" is a legendary & readable hatchet-job too.
*the Chaplin film, not the actual dictator.
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Originally posted by Ruprect View PostI find his films about as funny as getting an arrow through the neck and discovering there's a gas bill tied to it.
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