Analysis Of Das Boot

Great Essays
For many individuals there is a period when we must reconcile our past actions with our present reality. Though this can be accomplished through therapy, the challenge increases exponentially when an entire country is forced to confront its history. A notable example of this challenge is Germany after the events of World War II and the Holocaust. For German society, the current prevailing attitude is that a nation can only truly reckon with the past if they understand it. Das Boot is the perfect cultural representation of the idea that the only way Germany will be able to look to the future is through acknowledgement and realistic portrayal of the past. The modern confrontation with Germany’s Nazi past, like many German concepts, can be boiled …show more content…
The movie takes place in a German u-boat tasked with taking out British and American ships with torpedoes. They undergo many harrowing journeys along the way, but the viewer often is confined within the claustrophobic hull of the submarine. The film is characterized as a “crystal image” meaning it shows both sides of many aspects of society. The German Quarterly describes the film as having “a simultaneity of presence in different worlds, both above and below water.” This contrast is reflected in the crew of the ship. Much of the conflict revolves around the differences between the war-hardened, world-weary veterans and the shiny, Hitler-youth recruits. From the audience’s perspective, however, the film doesn’t appear to state a thesis concerning the war, but just portray the Nazi soldiers as humans rather than mustache-twirling humans. In the end of the film, the viewer is undoubtedly happy and relieved that the crew made it back to their own port; we are all suddenly reluctant Nazi sympathizers. The ease with which the audience can see their side offers a glimpse into how effortless it would be for an entire country to get swept into the Nazi party. In the most clever twist in the movie, moments after the submarine reaches home the port is bombed in an Allied air raid. We watch as the captain and most of the crew dies, and I found myself emotionally confused. I should, in a way, be satisfied, as this bombing means the good guys are closer to victory and Hitler can no longer commit his evils. At the same time, I just spent two hours with these sorry souls stuck in a submarine and hoped the whole time that they would make it home. It’s no wonder this film has been described as “ideologically promiscuous.” The only belief system the movie appears to subscribe to is that of the truth. Ultimately I think

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    My reaction to the setting and what was going on is Mad, I feel that I do not feel in anyway that Hitler was doing the right thing, he was Killing all of the Jews so he could have a perfect race of blond hair blue eyes. Hitler was not blonde hair blue eyes so he was not part of the race. I do not think that having only one race would help this world at all. This story had many parts of happiness even though they were hiding for their lives.…

    • 583 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Through this, Funder displays how Germany is attempting to clean away all the personal history and the impact of the Stasi, whilst still remembering the past. Ultimately, this fails as the cleaner “still can’t get [the mark] off” displaying how even in post GDR…

    • 1068 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    “For us there are only two possibilities: either we remain German or we come under the thumb of the Jews. This latter must not occur; even if we are small, we are a force. A well-organized group can conquer a strong enemy… We will be victorious over the Jews,” were Adolf Hitler’s words in his speech in Munich. To a certain extent, audience in today’s society would characterize his words to be on the more extreme end of identification, where it allowed his listeners to “dissociated from the others” (Jews) and grant them the permission of “symbolically kill those with whom they do not identify with.”…

    • 198 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    This excerpt from Thomas Doherty’s “Properly Direct Hatred” explains the urgent nature of America’s need for unity through the media during World War II, through particularly cinema. In this passage he explains that domestic issues of race, class, and ethnicity were eclipsed by the need to unify the heterogeneous population of the American ‘melting pot’ in order to fight in the war, not only militaristically and industrially, through the draft and increased production required by war, but also ideologically, because America’s power as a heterogeneous nation, directly countered Nazi ideologies of the Master Race eugenics. In his essay as a whole, Doherty outlines the way in which Hollywood collaborated with the Office of War Information to direct…

    • 1356 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Bridging the Gap An Analysis of the Generation Gap Through World War II The past and the present often conflict. In life, young people tend to disregard history and past events labeling them as old and outdated. Conversely, older people tend to get stuck in the past and cannot keep up with the ever-changing present.…

    • 1215 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Essay On The Book Thief

    • 389 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The movie, The Book Thief, by Markus Zusak is an amazing film, because he explains how Hitler and the holocaust had an impact on this family, the Hubberman’s, who at the time were hiding Max Vandenburg, a Jew. Friendship and the power of words are very repetitive during the film. In addition, Liesel doesn’t apprehend how powerful words are because she doesn’t know how to read. Later on, Markus Zusak shows us how Liesel uses the power of words to understand her emotions.…

    • 389 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Ian Kershaw’s article “Hitler and the Germans” analyzes the approach used to assert Hitler’s position in German politics. The main theme of this article is the creation of the “Hitler myth” and its spread throughout German society. This critique will discuss Kershaw’s argument and how effective it was. Kershaw argues that Hitler’s personality was not the key to his success and neither was his own personal Weltanschauung. He believes that it would be more accurate to study the popular image of Hitler, what the average German would have experienced.…

    • 1700 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    Perhaps the most dreadful event in recent history is the tragedy that befell the world during the Holocaust. Throughout a twelve year period, the Nazis were able to wreak havoc and torture innocent people purely because of their “inferiority”. The Nazi ideology was rooted in the idea that the German race was superior to all, and this state of mind was behind all of the atrocities that took place in Germany and surrounding areas. While the majority of the worst travesties took place during the final years of the holocaust, there was a significant build-up to those events, which took place throughout the years from 1933 to 1938. During these years, the Nazis began to show their true intention to the world, and began their systematic persecution…

    • 1436 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The processes in which the Germans were involved in to overcome the tragedies of World War II were vast and long. There were many complications present when the war ended; Germans found themselves questioned politically and mentally by their own compatriots, as well as outsiders. This essay will argue that the film The Murders Are Among Us depicts the complications involved in the German process of “overcoming the past,” post-World War II, through its characters. In particular, this essay will cover the development and practice of this process by discussing the three main characters of this film, Dr. Mertens, Cpt. Bruckner, and Susanne.…

    • 1117 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Many who read and study about the Holocaust, realize that the actions that took place can be considered as a genocide upon a nation of people that were seen as inferior to others…but that ultimately were not harming anyone throughout society. Despite studying all of the information about the Holocaust, the only “accurate” information comes from those whom were hard to undergo the course of this mass genocide. It is these eye-witness testimonies that allows, for those who did not experience it, brain to retain the material presented while also allowing the hearts to be moved to realize how it felt to be a Jew, Gypsy, Handicapped, or Prisoner of War (POW) during the concentration and medical camps of WWII. It is also because of the eye-witness testimonies that allow for one to realize why it is important to remember the Holocausts’ impact upon the lives of those affected…so that history never has the audacity to repeat. While reading the stories portrayed throughout the eye-witness accounts, I was able to place myself within the shoes of those whom were able to give their testimonies.…

    • 952 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The Danger of the Single Story From the great epics of Homer to the legendary myths told around campfires, stories are constantly surrounding us. They define the culture and assist in preserving history. Without stories,there would be no knowledge of the ancient Greek myths or of what life was like for the Jews who suffered under Hitler’s torment. Without stories, the world would be blind to the past, unable to progress or learn. Thus, stories are essential in any culture, but they have an inherent danger as well.…

    • 1528 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The process of discovering the ideological foundations of power systems in the world is profoundly linked to how gaining such knowledge is a product of transformation in both individuals and groups. This is evident in Guevara’s The Motorcycle Diaries (2004) and Becker’s tragicomic film Goodbye Lenin! (2003) where both protagonists and their environments undergo a process of political-self reflection. As Guevara encounters Latin American poverty he embraces communism and similarly, the protagonist in Becker’s film experiences political discovery as he preserves life in the GDR in order to keep the fall of the Berlin Wall as a secret to his ill mother.…

    • 1046 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Defying Hitler is written about the rise of National Socialism within the German people during the interwar phase of Germany. Sebastian Haffner’s writes about how Nazism filled a certain empty space within the war-torn German people. Mass culture started to wash over the German people; this would start to create a society that would be built upon abstract numbers and hollow celebrations. To Haffner, the German people lived an outward existence that was deprived of any meaningful balance in a private life. The empty private lives are precisely what helped Hitler’s nationalist and Nazi propaganda to be effective in the persuasion of the German people.…

    • 972 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    German civilians feel as though they are unfairly attached to the events of the Holocaust, especially those “who were either not in positions of power in the Third Reich or who belong to succeeding generations” (Bartov 793). Because of this, the Nazi has become “the new enemy of postwar Germany,” meaning much like the Jew during World War II, the Nazi “lurks in everyone and, in this sense, can never be ferreted out” (Bartov 793). At the same time, the Germans believe the Nazi and all Nazism stood for is vastly different from the beliefs of contemporary Germany and individual Germans that some choose to entirely ignore the historical significance of that portion of their nation’s history, regarding it as myth more than…

    • 1909 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Second World War Memory

    • 1724 Words
    • 7 Pages

    The Second World War: Collective Memory and History- Historiographical Essay: Judt, T. “The Past is Another Country: Myth and Memory in Post-War Europe.” In Memory and Power in Post-War Europe: Studies in the Presence of the Past, edited by J.W. Muller, 157-83. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004. First Paragraph- Judt’s Main Arguments: Tony Judt’s essay The Past is Another Country: Myth and Memory in Post-War Europe details the immediate post-war European past that failed to face the various problems associated with the devastating effects of World War Two.…

    • 1724 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Superior Essays