Your planner helps you schedule your entire Jewish Internation Film Festival experience. It shows sessions you've saved, in a helpful timeline.
or to save your planner
Your Planner is empty.
Browse Films & Events
How many pickles are you giving
{film-title}?
Your details to confirm your vote.
“★★★★★ A textured, complex portrait that feels close to definitive; a slice of dark history that speaks (eloquently, implicitly) to present-day tensions.” – The Guardian
“A mind-boggling insight into the rise of fascism.” – ABC
“Forensic and merciless.” – Screen Daily
Leni Riefenstahl was called the “best director who ever lived” by Quentin Tarantino and her films Triumph of the Will (1935) and Olympia (1938) were described by legendary film critic Pauline Kael as “the two greatest films ever directed by a woman”. Lauded though they may be, these films were commissioned Nazi propaganda, and Riefenstahl spent the rest of her 101-year-long life after the fall of Nazism remaining unapologetic of her work and denying awareness of the Holocaust.
This searing and compelling documentary questions Riefenstahl’s claims of naivety, seeking to understand how she came to be received so warmly in the decades following World War II. With unprecedented access to 700 boxes of archival material from Riefenstahl’s private estate, documentarian Andres Veiel pieces together a fascinating portrait of one of the 20th century’s most controversial figures and her complex legacy in the overlap of art and politics.
M
Germany
115
Andres Veiel
Leni Riefenstahl
German, English, French (English subtitles)
Stay up to date with JIFF news and films during the year, and for regular updates and insider news during the festival period.
You can unsubscribe at any time. See our Privacy Policy.