The Nazis: A Warning from History explained

Genre:Documentary
Narrated:Samuel West
Theme Music Composer:Johannes Brahms
Opentheme:"Denn alles Fleisch es ist wie Gras", the second movement of A German Requiem
Country:United Kingdom
Num Series:1
Num Episodes:6
Producer:Laurence Rees
Cinematography:Martin Patmore
Runtime:Approx 50 mins.
Company:BBC
Network:BBC Two

The Nazis: A Warning from History is a 1997 BBC documentary film series that examines Adolf Hitler and the Nazis' rise to power in Germany, their zenith, their decline and fall, and the consequences of their reign. It featured archive footage and interviews with eyewitnesses and was shown in six episodes.[1]

In the United States, the series premiered on the by A&E Networks owned The History Channel, and was aired from 8 February until 12 February 1998.[2]

Production

The series was written and produced by Laurence Rees. The historical and script consultant was Prof. Sir Ian Kershaw, who also appears briefly in the "Chaos and Consent" episode. The series was narrated by actor Samuel West. The music used over the opening credits is "Denn alles Fleisch es ist wie Gras", the second movement of Brahms' A German Requiem.

Acclaim

The documentary earned the BBC and producer Reese a 1997 Peabody Award, its jurors calling it a "superbly documented six-part series, The Nazis: A Warning from History is a chillingly thorough account of the Third Reich’s rise and fall."[3] The Peabody Award was a year later followed by two others; an IDA (International Documentary Association) Award in the "Limited Series" category,[4] and a BAFTA Award in the category "Best Factual Series".

The Nazis: A Warning from History ranked 93rd in a list of the 100 Greatest British Television Programmes drawn up by the British Film Institute in 2000 based on votes by industry professionals.

Home video formats

The documentary was for home viewing first released in the UK as a two-tape VHS set on 2 February 1998 by BBC Worldwide Ltd., which was only six years later followed by an UK two-disc DVD set release on 24 May 2004 .

In North American the first home video release was the 26 October 1999 VHS The Nazis- The Acclaimed BBC Documentary six-tape box set from A&E Home Video, the History Channel's regular home video format publisher which had been licensed to air the series internationally, including the UK for its reruns.[2] This was followed by the 18 July 2006 four-disc DVD set from BBC Home Entertainment for which the BBC commissioned Time Life Books (who had actually already released the precursory The Third Reich book series that dealt with the same subject matter) for the retail distribution and promotional services, which included at least one television commercial. An American reissue has followed suit on 25 August 2015 .

Spain saw the "Nazis: un aviso de la historia" two-disc DVD set release by Divisa Red, S.A.U. in May 2005, which the company reissued on 29 October 2008 . A three-disc Benelux DVD version was released twice in 2006 by Just Entertainment, while France had its two-disc set released by Koba Films on 4 June 2014 as "Nazis, un avertissement de l'histoire" . The documentary had not seen a home video format in Germany itself, though the companion book was published in translation, which it had not been in the other European countries.

The UK and Benelux DVD sets all featured a band mentioning "Best Factual Series", the category which had earned the documentary its 1998 BAFTA Award, whereas the French release had the fact mentioned on the back cover of the set. Neither Spanish release had the fact mentioned though.

Companion book

Episodes

External links

Notes and References

  1. BBC (1997), The Nazis - A Warning From History. TV Mini-Series. Selected episodes available at YouTube. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  2. Book: Selznick, Barbara. Global Television: Co-Producing Culture. Temple University Press. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 13 June 2008. 224. 9781592135035. (pp. 158 & 162)
  3. Web site: The Nazis: A Warning from History. PeabodyAwards.com.
  4. Web site: 1998 Limited Series Awards: The Nazis— A Warning from History. Documentary.org.