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  1. Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Posts
    25,068
    #1
    NEW YORK – Adolf Hitler, for years a vessel of frustration in a popular Internet meme, has been quieted.

    "Downfall," a German film released in 2004 about Hitler's last days, has been adopted for wildly popular YouTube parodies that have spanned mock rants about topics as varied as playing Xbox video games to Kanye West to Apple's new iPad.

    Every spoof is from the same scene in the film: A furious, defeated Hitler, played by Bruno Ganz, unleashes an impassioned, angry speech to his remaining staff, huddled with him in his underground bunker.

    The scene takes on widely different meaning when paired with English subtitles about, say, a late-season collapse by the New York Mets. Most any subject could be — and was — substituted, made even funnier by the scene's intense melodrama, artful staging and timely cutaways.

    It was the meme that refused to die — until it did.

    On Tuesday, the clips on YouTube, many of which had been watched by hundreds of thousands, even millions, began disappearing from the site. Constantin Films, the company that owns the rights to the film, asked for them to be removed, and YouTube complied.

    Many Hitler clips were still online Wednesday, and new parodies were popping up featuring Hitler ranting about his removal from YouTube.

    For years, the meme has held an unusually steadfast position in Internet culture. While most online parodies come and go overnight, new "Downfall" spoofs have been continually created for years. It's not known exactly how many have existed but estimates run in the hundreds.

    They have served as a kind of soapbox for real and mock anguish, a way to comically vent about anything and everything.

    The film's director, Oliver Hirschbiegel, told New York magazine in January that he was constantly sent the parodies and he very much liked them.

    "The point of the film was to kick these terrible people off the throne that made them demons, making them real and their actions into reality," Hirschbiegel told the magazine. "I think it's only fair if now it's taken as part of our history and used for whatever purposes people like. If only I got royalties for it, then I'd be even happier."

    The loss was felt across the Web on Wednesday as if a grand, beloved tradition had been stifled.

    In one of its most commented-on posts, the blog Techcrunch lamented that a voice had been lost, writing: "Memes on the Internet don't get any better than the Hitler one."
    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100421/...xlcmRvd25mYQ--

  2. Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Posts
    22,704
    #2
    Finally!

    They were funny in the beginning... but at this point, it's just beating a dead horse...

    Ang pagbalik ng comeback...

Hitler `Downfall' parodies removed from YouTube