While focusing on his public life, the transcript also includes crucial, yet sometimes fictionalized, scenes with Eva Braun, aimed at showing the cold, detached nature of his personal relationships.
Gerlich’s dialogue acts as the moral compass of the film. The script brilliantly juxtaposes the complacency of the intellectual elite against the visceral, emotional manipulation deployed by the Nazi party. It serves as a structural warning to the audience about the fragility of democratic institutions when faced with calculated populism. Act III: The High Society Alliance
Context: Hitler addresses a small crowd in a Munich beer hall, discovering his ability to manipulate public anger over the Treaty of Versailles. hitler the rise of evil transcript exclusive
The script implies Hitler's WWI Iron Cross First Class was unearned; historically, he was recommended for it by a Jewish superior officer, Hugo Gutmann.
"Very well. If there is no other way to form a majority, let him be Chancellor." While focusing on his public life, the transcript
(Shouting over the noise) Silence! Absolute madness! Separate from Germany? To leave our fatherland fractured while the thieves of Versailles pick at our bones?
One of the most powerful revelations in the transcript is the weight given to Reinhold Hanisch (played by Colin Mace), Hitler’s partner in the men’s hostel, who later betrayed him. The transcript’s dialogue here is almost Shakespearean. It serves as a structural warning to the
It was during his time in Vienna, from 1907 to 1913, that Hitler began to formulate his worldview. He became increasingly fascinated with anti-Semitic and nationalist ideologies, influenced by the likes of Georg von Schönerer and Dietrich Eckart. Hitler's own writings from this period reveal a man consumed by hatred and a desire for revenge against the Jewish community, whom he blamed for his misfortunes.
HANISCH: "You paint pretty pictures, Adolf, but you hate everyone who buys them." HITLER: "I hate everyone who breathes."