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CBS Developing Four-Hour Miniseries About Hitler |
Tuesday January 22 12:54 AM ET By Josef Adalian HOLLYWOOD (Variety) - With the world's attention focused on the search for Osama bin Laden, CBS is developing a four-hour miniseries about another evildoer: Adolf Hitler. The picture will explore the early life of the man who would be fuehrer, as well as the social and political environment that allowed him to rise to power. The project's Canadian producer, Alliance Atlantis, has optioned the rights to two tomes by Hitler historian Ian Kershaw and will use Kershaw's best-selling ``Hitler: 1889-1936 Hubris'' as the basis for the miniseries. The picture is being developed for the 2002-03 season. ``What we're attempting to do is something pure,'' said Ed Gernon, who will serve as an executive producer. ``We didn't want to go the popular literature route (about Hitler). We want to do a work that is very dangerous and indeed daring. It's an extraordinarily brave take that CBS has allowed us to do.'' Unlike most previous TV movies focusing on Nazi Germany or Hitler's actions, the CBS project will focus on the man himself. ``We are telling the story of an antihero, and he is the main character of the film,'' Gernon said, allowing that the miniseries would also devote a good chunk of time to how society allowed Hitler to come to power, and why it took so long before he was halted. ``Part of the story is a society that conspired to make (Hitler) possible -- and then stood back and did nothing to stop him,'' he said. ``He was a man underestimated by everyone, (particularly) those who tried to use him.'' Gernon said he and CBS are committed to creating a picture that paints a historically accurate, rather than sensationalistic, portrait of Hitler. The use of Kershaw's books will ensure that's the case, he said. ``We wanted to make sure we had the most unimpeachable source material,'' Gernon said. ``It took quite a bit of convincing to get this scholar from England to let an American network use his books to make this.'' While Gernon said he and fellow executive producer Peter Sussman will not go ``out of our way to create a sympathetic character'' of Hitler, the picture will not be heavy-handed in its portrait of his evil. ``We're going to put the story up on its feet and let the audience judge him,'' he said. Coincidentally another Canadian producer, Lions Gate Films, is shooting a fictional feature about young Hitler's days as a starving artist, starring Noah Taylor (''Vanilla Sky''). The film, called ``Max,'' also stars John Cusack. It is scheduled for release in the fall. |
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Novelist William Boyd is scripting a drama based on the life of Adolf Hitler for
BBC2. The four-part serial will follow Hitler's rise to power in Germany and eventual suicide at the end of World War II. It is expected to focus on the psychological and cultural influences that shaped the dictator's character. His relationships with those closest to him, including lover Eva Braun and members of his inner circle such as Albert Speer and Joseph Goebbels, will also be explored. A spokesman for BBC2 said: "There is now a substantial enough period of time between the present day and the lifetime of perhaps the most evil figure of the 20th century to bring the story of Adolf Hitler to our screens." Boyd's TV writing credits include adaptations of his own novel Armadillo for BBC1 last autumn, and Evelyn Waugh's Sword of Honour trilogy, which was broadcast on Channel 4 in early 2000, reports Media Guardian. Story filed: 09:11 Friday 7th June 2002 |
BBC Plans Hitler Series |
washingtonpost.com CBS to Produce Hitler Miniseries The Associated Press Monday, June 10, 2002; 4:43 PM NEW YORK -- CBS has given producers the go-ahead to make a four-hour miniseries about the rise to power of Adolf Hitler, based on a best-selling book. Although it may seem risky to commit so much television time to a notorious villain, CBS said it believed this was an important project. "I'd be lying if I said we aren't a bit nervous about attempting to examine one of history's most heinous characters, but in this age of megalomaniacal terrorism, we feel it is all the more important and relevant," said Ed Gernon, executive producer. No air date has been set, and the cast hasn't been named. CBS is hoping to run the miniseries during a ratings "sweeps" month next television season. CBS has already committed to miniseries next season on other historical subjects: the Salem Witch Trials and the arrest of former FBI agent Robert Hanssen on spy charges. The Hitler miniseries is based on "Hitler: 1889-1936 Hubris," by historian Ian Kershaw, which looked at the society in which he rose to power. © 2002 The Associated Press |

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Update March 16, 2003 Sir Ian Kershaw quits the project in protest to script revisions. |