Louis and the Nazis (TV Movie 2003) Poster

(2003 TV Movie)

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9/10
Yet another very, very bizarre Louis Theroux freak show...and I mean that in a good way.
planktonrules21 May 2009
I first became acquainted with Louis Theroux and his wonderful documentaries with his BBC show on the Phelps family ("The Most Hated Family in America"). I was so impressed with his interview style, that I immediately sought out more of his work. What I'd particularly liked was how he was so gentle in his technique--encouraging the people to talk as well as invite him into their lives.

As for the Phelps family, they and their sick ways were hard to take, but the undercurrent of the show was dramatically different from "Louis and the Nazis". That's because although the Phelps family was repugnant, they didn't seem especially dangerous. However, with this Nazi film, I felt very tense at times and kept expecting the Nazis to beat up Louis and his film crew! This time, there was an evil message AND an omnipresent threat to do bodily harm.

Like the Phelps film, however, there was a strong sense of disbelief that such despicable people actually SEEMED rather nice when they talked to Louis because of his disarming style--at least they seemed nice to a point. He seemed to get more information with his style than a more confrontational and abrasive interviewer.

Some standout scenes from the film included:

--The family who insisted to know whether or not Louis was Jewish. Wow was this tense.

--The twin young girls who sang white supremacist songs, played racist video games AND whose mother was engaged to a teacher of some sort. They were cagey about exactly what his job was and where he worked. Apparently they were afraid someone would take this the wrong/right way.

--Louis repeatedly asking the Nazis he met if he could stay the night. Not surprisingly, they didn't invite him for a sleepover.

--When he takes a road trip, of places, to Mexico with two supremacists. The guys are almost likable at times, unless of course you THINK about what they are. And as for the trip, it was rather surreal and pointless...which made it rather interesting in an odd way.

Overall, I liked it very much, though some might be put off by the rather aimless style of the film (at times) and some might object to Louis NOT screaming or hitting the Nazis. Plus, parents be advised, not only are these very objectionable people, but the language is pretty appalling. It's certainly NOT a film for little kids, though I strongly think that teens could learn a lot from it--after all, you can't protect them forever AND they need to know people like this do exist.
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8/10
Sad.
etoile737 March 2007
Warning: Spoilers
This movie was depressing. I had such an emotional reaction to it, and I couldn't help feel like crying. I literally felt depressed after finishing it, and I am by no means a sheltered person.

One of the parts that struck me the most was when Louis was at the BBQ with the skinheads, and they kept asking him if he was Jewish or not. I felt very very sad for Louis. I suspect he is, and I greatly admired him for saying it did not matter if he was or not. When they were at the skinhead rally, and they were doing the Heil Hitler sign, I don't know, I couldn't even watch because it depressed me so much. The Nazis were brutal killers and for people to actually APPROVE of it is beyond belief for me.

I feel very very sad for humanity that people still think like this and scared of these people. I feel sorry for the little girl band because they are doing the Nazi salute without knowing what it is.

On the other hand, I am grateful to my parents for raising me so I would know the truth, and know that race matters not but what is inside a person that does.
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Louis is his usual semi-objective self and, despite his obvious views, he lets the subjects make their own point
bob the moo21 January 2004
Louis Theroux travels to California to meet the man dubbed `the most dangerous racist in America' - Tom Metzger. Louis meets him, his family and his publicity manager as well as following him to skinhead rallies and on a visit to Mexico.

Louis goes back to a sort of area that he has touched on before - racists. He previously had visited a racist leader in South Africa as part of his Weird Weekends show and clearly felt the subject warranted another look. Here he joins a man who was a Grand Dragon in the 70's, up for congress in the 80's and is now leading a group called WAR. Louis style is a little too clever for his own good but it does work at times, here he is laid back enough to allow the subjects to speak for themselves and paint themselves in their own colours, but also he isn't afraid to come out and say things - `that's utter bull' he says as Tom decries the fact that blacks get lighter sentences than skinheads for the same crimes.

The overall approach here is too give these people enough rope to ultimately hang themselves and, on the whole they do, although they also make points that are fair and can be related to. However, what is obvious that, while even Tom has Mexican friends (or at least calls them friends to their face but downplays on camera) the belly of their belief is hatred of the other races. This is the main thing that gets them. A lot of what they say could be accepted as their beliefs and I could go on and say `live and let live', but when they start to say things calmly like `if a n*gger gets out of line then he should be lynched' or `lynching is too slow, we want them all out now' then it shows the sheer hate that they carry.

Louis has no easy answers and doesn't set out to discover why they are like this, nor does he mock them or go for easy swipes. He lets things speak for themselves and lets us mostly take what we see. So when a `visit' to Mexico basically turns into a pub crawl, we see it, or when a `skin head rally' which is considered `significant' turns out to be about 40 people in a dusty field, we see it. The film shows everyone as people and not monsters, but it also shows how silly their beliefs can be, how abhorrent and isolationist their lives can be and also how very dangerous hate can be. It amazed me that these people would be hypocritical yet seem to hold such strong beliefs. Although I'm not being PC, I feel very strongly about anyone's views (whether extreme racist, Christian, Muslim, animal rights etc) if they involve hurting, threatening or hating others - if you disagree sometimes it is hard to have 100% respect for the other person, but killing is zero respect and views that promote it for whatever strongly held belief must be stamped out.

The film is quite relaxed and comic as is Louis' style, but it does have very hard moments, which are not only acted out but written all over Louis' face. The tensest moment comes when Louis visits one of the skinheads in his family and asks `what difference would it make to us chatting if I was a Jew?' the guy simply says that if the camera was off they'd beat him up and kick him into the street at best. For the next 5 minutes they grill him to get him to admit he is Jewish - a fact that Louis never confirms or denies but he does look very, very nervous.

Overall this film is what Louis does very well - he is our eyes and ears and tries not to force his opinion onto the subject more than he has to (although the views he gets here are so obviously abhorrent to him that it is hard not to). It has no major conclusions or answers but this is a film about `ordinary' people that is well worth checking out, even if it is very frightening at times. One comment I would make is that it is easy to do this show with this racist stand because it is very un-PC, and rightly so. However I would really like to see some films that look at racism from the pro-black side (to the point where it is anti-mixing etc in the same way as Tom is). In fact, many black extremists share views with Tom -when Tom stated his desire for `them' to `go back to Africa' and `have their own country', I wonder did he know that Marcus Garvey had been saying that many years prior to anyone even knowing he existed.
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