Eiji Tsuburaya served both as director and cinematographer of this feature-length national policy documentary, supported by the naval ministry, which creates a sketch of life among cadets aboard a naval training vessel on a voyage around Indochina, Malaya, Hawaii, Australia, and the South Pacific islands. The film clearly outlines the economic motives behind Japan’s southward e...
One of most bizarre propaganda films celebrating nature and its meaning in forging the ideology of the Third Reich. It wasn't received very well by Goebbels and Hitler. I wouldn't even call it a National-Socialist propaganda. More like pangermanic, neopagan and ecologic one. It is also quite disturbing and doesn't go along the NSDAP line all the time. One can be surprised with ...
This film deals with malnutrition in Britain. It focuses on the relationship between income and nutrition and suggests that government schemes can improve the current situation. It shows that people on low incomes are likely to be consuming insufficient nutrients, for instance, not enough calcium or iron and, as a result, are prone to diseases such as rickets and anaemia.
Marta Eggerth is cast as Christine, a young singer who aspires to find out who her father was. Her odyssey brings her to the court of a mythical kingdom, where she is romanced by handsome lieutenant Walter (Johannes Heesters). He is warned not to lose his heart to a "commoner," but all turns out all right when King Serenissimus (Otto Tressler) turns out to be Christine's long-l...