Wort und Tat (Words and Deeds) is a 10-minute-long Nazi propaganda film directed by Fritz Hippler, which was released in 1938.
"[2] The film is known for the extensive use of montage to get its message across, in a style reminiscent of Sergei Eisensteins Oktober.
[3] The film begins with a montage of clips from the Weimar period, showing a series of clips of Labor and Communist rallies,[4] interspersed with scenes of scantily clad cabaret girls, and then shots of posters of various Weimar era political parties.
This sequence ends with former chancellor Heinrich Brüning making a speech against National Socialism.
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