I thought this was a very good movie, but I thought it was so depressing. I don't know if I would ever want to watch it again. Like I said, it is good, though. I wouldn't discourage anyone from watching it.
I will be watching this tonight.

My mom wanted to see this one so bad. She thought it looked so good. As she would say "A good old-fashioned war film".

So we will see what I think about it tonight. I offered my brother the chance to watch it, but he has to make up his mind soon because it is a library film.

I know he was always into the real story of it. I would be curious to hear his opinion, too.
So, how did they fall for Hitler's promises? Pretty much the same way we fall for our leaders' promises, basically.
In a way, you can't really blame these people. I mean, you CAN, but you can't. When you watch something like TOTW, you can see how Hitler is so obviously taking advantage of the citizens of Germany. When people feel as though they are desperate, someone comes along and says
just what they want to hear. And, unfortunately, when someone feels that they are in a desperate situation, I think they become gullible and they fall for what is being said. They fall for the "it's too good to be true" offer. I won't go on about something in particular with someone from my family (and I won't compare a financial situation to Nazi Germany), but I knew from that that when a person was desperate enough, they want to believe that someone will help them make it right again. I said it wasn't going to help this person, but I wasn't listened to and it actually made the situation worse. So we all know there were people who said that they should watch out for Hitler, and that he is just, essentially, playing all of them, but there are going to be more people who hope that what he was saying is true. And I think they wanted to believe that more than what the truth really was.
I watched Triumph of the Will with English subtitles. So the speeches were understandable and surprisingly benign sounding for the most part, with the exception of Goebbels's speech when he talked about racial purity laws. The Nazis really toned down their rhetoric in this film, so that the average person watching this back in the day wouldn't be shocked by what they seen. Now a days of course we are shocked, and rightly so.
Actually, the scene where they are in that hall? I don't really remember details anymore except that I laughed to myself because the names were shown on screen like they were neon lights or something like that. Anyway, they pan over the audience when they are all standing and applauding after the speech. And there is one guy that is just sitting there with his arms folded (I am pretty sure there was only one). I actually went back and watched that moment again. And you could see he wasn't too impressed with anything. I thought that was pretty bold of him to not stand considering he was wearing the uniform!