
1989
As with so many early films by Sokurov, this film has two dates: the first is the date of its creation (the film was then banned), the second is the date of the final edition and legal public screening. The film consists of German and Soviet archive footage of the World War II — to be exact, from the end of the war. An attempt to make a large–scale documentary on this subject had been undertaken in the Soviet cinema of the 1960s: the film — “Ordinary Fascism” — by the outstanding Soviet film–maker Mikhail Romm had become a classic retrospective investigation of fascism. But Sokurov uses the expressive power of the documentary image in an absolutely different way. He does not amass materials for a large–scale picture of Nazi crimes.

Adolf Hitler
Self (archive footage)

America the Beautiful

Behind The 1975’s 'Notes on a Conditional Form'

Kurosawa's Way

Libre

Searching for Bong

An Indian Story

White Earth

Font Men

Visions of Europe

Piping Hot

Momentum

Modern Football

Ocean Oasis

Brigitte

Alfonso Sánchez

Ånga om sommaren

Loucura e Cultura

The Ancient Games

The Presence

Hedda Hopper's Hollywood No. 2