Mein Kampf is a 1960 Swedish documentary film about the rise and fall of Adolf Hitler, directed by Erwin Leiser.
It was admired by George Seaton and William Perlberg, who saw it in Copenhagen, and they suggested Paramount buy it.
The studio refused; the film was instead bought by Columbia for distribution in the United States for $50,000.
It was seen in a Munich cinema by Leni Riefenstahl, who recalled she was "rendered speechless by what I saw on the screen" and considered it "a gross infringement of copyright and also intellectual theft."
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