Film Documents of the Atrocities of the German Fascist Invaders

57 mins
This Soviet-made film was screened on February 19, 1946 on the 62nd day of the Nuremberg Trial and submitted as evidence relevant to the indictment for "crimes against humanity." The one-hour film with voiceover commentary shows visual evidence of the extermination camps of Auschwitz and Majdanek and appeals to spectators' emotions by emphasizing individual victims. The central argument of the film is that the Germans were the executioners of peaceful Soviet citizens. At the time, it made a very strong impression on both the accused and press. The film is a re-edited compilation of footage collected by the Soviet film team over four years (primarily used for propagandistic ends in wartime Soviet newsreels and documentaries). It was prepared in emergency by the Soviet prosecution team and minister of cinema following the projection of Nazi Concentration Camps presented by the Americans on November 29, 1945.

Ivan Panov

Camera Operator

Kenan Kutub-Sade

Camera Operator

Mikhail Poselskiy

Camera Operator

Moisey Segel

Camera Operator

Vasily Solovyov

Camera Operator

Alexander Vorontsov

Camera Operator

Andrey Sologubov

Camera Operator

Arkadiy Zenyakin

Camera Operator

Arkadiy Levitan

Camera Operator

Viktor Dobronitsky

Camera Operator

Vladimir Yeshurin

Camera Operator

Vladislav Mikosha

Camera Operator

Yevgeni Mukhin

Camera Operator

Mark Troyanovsky

Camera Operator

Raphail Gikov

Camera Operator

Roman Karmen

Camera Operator

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