Actors: Gene Hitler, Romano Hitler, Emily Hittler
Director: Matthew Ogens
Format: Color, NTSC, Widescreen
Language: English
Region: Region 1
Number of discs: 1
Studio: Virgil Films and Entertainment
DVD Release Date: April 5, 2016
Run Time: 84 minutes
Meet the Hitlers is a seemingly narrow
documentary about people with the name Hitler, and how it has impacted their
lives. Although I found the premise for this documentary intriguing, I was
concerned that there would not be enough material to hold my attention for an
entire feature. This problem is helped a great deal by adding a secondary story
about the investigation into Hitler’s actual bloodline, but the greater
solution comes in the filmmaker’s ability to make this a film about the people
rather than their name, which also seems to align with the overall message
within the narrative.
Gene Hitler is a friendly widow, Emily Hittler
is an average high school girl, and Hitler Gutierrez is an Ecuadorian immigrant
whose father took what he thought to be an original name from the front pages
of the newspaper. They each have lived with their name, knowing that it will
always create something of a reaction but choosing to keep it anyway. There is
a certain amount of nobility in this choice, whereas Heath and Deborah Campbell
choosing to name their child Adolf Hitler Campbell is a far harder pill to
swallow. Their argument about freedom of speech is certainly valid, but it is
difficult to take the side of someone who would willingly subject their child
to that name. To make matters worse, I’m nearly certain one of their other
children was named Aryan Nation Campbell before the courts interceded.
On the other
side of this documentary is an investigation into the actual relatives of the
infamous dictator, most of which have long changed their names. When
descendants are tracked down in the United States , they refuse to be
interviewed for the documentary, leading to something of a dead-end. Or does
it? What would they have offered in an interview that we can’t already imagine
them saying. Somehow we like to imagine the descendants of a monster to carry
some of those traits, but the one man claiming to be a descendant of Hitler who
is interviewed mostly just comes off as extremely human, deserving of pity and
compassion regardless of his shortcomings and certainly despite his name.
I was moved by
this documentary, found myself captivated by these individuals as they shared
aspects of their lives, seemingly disconnected from whatever their names are. I
think the message very subtly delivered with respectful precision by filmmaker
Matt Ogens (Confessions of a Superhero), never trying to push an agenda or a
message within the examination of its ideas. In the end, a name can only tell you
so much about a person, and the best way to show us that is simply by allowing
us to see more of those people who may be often unfairly judged for their name
alone.
Entertainment Value:
8.5/10
Quality of
Filmmaking: 9/10
Historical
Significance: 5/10
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