Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - ? Shocked: A woman who never married after Hitler's divorce.

? Shocked: A woman who never married after Hitler's divorce.

Introduction: Riefenstahl, a former famous German female directors, is beautiful and artistic. It is said that in 1932, after seeing the films of Rivenstal, he appreciated the masculinity, fierceness and Wagner-style aesthetics in her films. 1933, the Nazi Party of Germany came to power. After a private meeting with Riefenstahl, she was invited to make a documentary for the Nazi Party. Inspired by Arnold Fanck, Riefenstahl agreed to her request and filmed the documentary Victory of Will 1933, which described the Nazi Party's rule in Nuremberg and showed her extraordinary talent in film. The premiere of this film happened to be Hitler's 49th birthday. Her brilliant gift later won four awards in the history of film, but it also became her eternal stain. & gt However, it is inconclusive whether Riefenstahl is a real fascist artist. Her last film for the Third Reich was 1937, and then she refused to serve the Third Reich. After the collapse of the Third Reich, she was the first filmmaker to be sent to prison. She was identified as a Nazi sympathizer and was arrested several times (during which she successfully crossed the prison once). 1949, she finally ended her prison, but the prison of public opinion and criticism surrounded her faster and more firmly, and her directing career ended forever with the fall of the empire. Throughout her life, she refused to admit that she had a "romantic relationship" with Hitler's government, insisting that she was only a film director. & gt Even so, many people suspect that Riefenstahl is Hitler's secret crush. Rivenstar's only marriage was with Major Peter Jacob in 1944, but they broke up three years later. Rivenstar has no children. Her only brother Heinz also died in the battlefield of World War II. After the war, Rivenstar was arrested and imprisoned, and spent three years in prison. In the meantime, she was sent to a mental hospital many times. Although he was still suspected of being a Nazi collaborator, Rivenstal was finally acquitted by the war court. After she was released from prison, she could no longer direct movies, and she lived in poverty, so she had to live in a small apartment with her mother. & gt In the 1960s, Rifenstar, who decided to return to his old job, lived in the Nuba tribe in central Sudan for a long time and filmed all aspects of their lives. She herself is regarded as one of them by the Nuba people. After living in Sudan, Riefenstahl turned to underwater photography. She was 72 years old when she began to learn diving. In order to take a diving course, she lied about her age of 20. After the course, Rifenstar went diving in Maldives, Indian Ocean, Red Sea and Papua New Guinea to photograph marine plants and animal communities. & gt It was during this period that Riefenstahl met Keitner, a photographer half her age. Later, Keitner became her assistant and companion. /kloc-When she was 0/00 years old, she created a film called Underwater Impression based on her diving activities. > To sum up her life, Rivenstar hopes that people will remember her as a "diligent ... woman whose life is recognized by people". & gt