The Dismissal (film) explained

The Dismissal
Director:Wolfgang Liebeneiner
Producer:
Starring:See below
Music:Herbert Windt
Cinematography:Fritz Arno Wagner
Editing:Martha Dübber
Country:Nazi Germany
Language:German
Budget:3.6 million ℛℳ
Gross:6.5 million ℛℳ

The Dismissal (German: '''Die Entlassung''') is a 1942 German film directed by Wolfgang Liebeneiner about the dismissal of Otto von Bismarck. It was one of only five films to receive the honorary distinction "Film of the Nation" by the Reich Propaganda Ministry Censorship Office.

Plot

The film shows Bismarck being dismissed by Wilhelm II of Germany and the dilettantes who surround him. An unscrupulous schemer plays on the king's desire to lead and so persuades him to the dismissal. This results in a disastrous two-front war by destroying Bismarck's treaty with Russia and leaving him to lament with the question of who would complete his work.

The film ends with a postscript stating that Germany's misfortunes from 1890 to 1933 were the result of Bismarck's dismissal and that a nation's fate is from its personalities not its institutions.

Production

The success of Bismarck led to the creation of a sequel. The Dismissal cost 3.6 million ℛℳ to produce.

Release

The Dismissal was first shown in the small town of Stettin on 15 September 1942, to gauge whether the film should receive a general release. Alfred Rosenberg reported that the film should not be released as it gave the impression of German war guilt, it could aid Allied propaganda, and that it reminded the German people of Wilhelm's policies. However, the film was released as Joseph Goebbels viewed it as "a brilliant success".

The film was approved by the censors on 28 August, and premiered in Berlin on 6 October. The war with Russia delayed its release, and it was not exported, owing to the obvious parallels. Ulrich von Hassell felt that the film was anti-monarchist. It earned 6.5 million ℛℳ at the box office for a profit of 2,081,000 ℛℳ .

Works cited

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