Ordinary Fascism (Russian: Обыкновенный фашизм, romanizedObyknovennyy fashizm), or Triumph Over Violence is a 1965 Soviet film directed by Mikhail Romm. The film is also known as Echo of the Jackboot in the United Kingdom. The film uses archival footage to depict the rise and fall of fascism in Nazi Germany.[1]

Ordinary Fascism
English theatrical release poster
Directed byMikhail Romm
Written by
StarringMikhail Romm
CinematographyGerman Lavrov
Edited by
Music byAlemdar Karamanov
Release date
  • February 1968 (1968-02)
Running time
  • 138 minutes
  • 133 minutes (Germany)
  • 82 minutes (US)
  • 129 minutes (Japan)
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian

Style

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The film's style was largely influenced by the work of Soviet documentarian Esfir Shub. Shub is regarded as the creator of the compilation film, which uses existing footage to depict historical events. Shub's most famous compilation film, The Fall of the Romanov Dynasty, gathered newsreel footage from pre-revolutionary Russia to depict the decline of the Czar and valorize the Russian Revolution. Inspired by Shub's state-approved documentary style, Romm culled material from German archives, archives of post-war antifascist organizations, photo archives and archives seized from the German military to create his documentary.

Romm used novel technologies in the documentary. With reverse playback, Romm was able to repeat sequences like the kiss given by a Nazi party official to industrialist Alfried Krupp, which Romm used to highlight the relationship between the Nazi party and organized capital. Romm also used freeze-frame shots to focus on moments from the archival footage.

Aside from co-writing, co-editing, and directing the film, Romm also provided the film's narration. Initially, had wanted the narration done by someone else, but when his collaborators heard working versions of his voice-over, they encouraged him to do it. Romm's unique vocabulary and intonation became one of the film's main notable features.

Influence

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Vadim Abdrashitov in an interview mentions Ordinary Fascism as the film that inspired him to make his own movies.

Soundtrack

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Peter Rollberg (2009). Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Cinema. US: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 501–502. ISBN 978-0-8108-6072-8.
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