The film was shown for the first time at the
Venice Film Festival on
August 29, 2024. It premiered in German cinemas on October 31, 2024. (Riefenstahl herself was honored several times at the Venice Film Festival. In 1932, she was awarded the silver medal for
The Blue Light; in 1934, the gold medal for
Triumph of the Will; and, in 1938, the gold medal of the
Coppa Mussolini for best foreign film for
Olympia.) In
North America, the premiere took place at the
Telluride Film Festival, in the
town in the interior of
Colorado, where Riefenstahl received the prize of honor at the first festival in 1974.
AWARDS 05.09.2024 – Best movie - Cinema & Arts Award, Venice
14.09.2024 – Cine Docs Prize - CineFest Miskolc International Film Festival, Hungary
27.09.2024 – Grand Jury Prize – 14. Film Festival Valenciennes
28.09.2024 – Winner Gold Award - Spotlight Documentary Award
29.09.2024 – Youth Jury Favorite 2024 - Filmkunstmesse Leipzig 2024
29.09.2024 – Best Documentary 2024 - Gilde Filmpreis of AG Kino-Gilde
09.01.2025 – Best Documentary - “Michel Ciment” Pessac Film Festival, France
19.02.2025 – Best Documentary - Dublin International Film Festival
23.02.2025 – Jury Prize - Atlanta Jewish Film Festival
14.04.2025 – Best Documentary - German Film Awards (Nomination)
19.04.2025 – Fire Bird Arward - Jury Prize, Hong Kong
14.10.2025 – European Film, European Doc - European Film Award (Nomination)
14.10.2025 – Best Documentary Feature, Best Archival Documentary, Best Historical Documentary - Critics Choice Awards (Nomination)
Critical reception German film journalist wrote on the
Programmkino.de portal: "A meticulously compiled and exciting puzzle of a contradictory biography. 'Visionary? Manipulator? Liar?' the poster asks programmatically. As always, Veiel wisely leaves the answers to the audience. A milestone in biographical filmmaking. At the same time, an important educational film about the power of images - always topical in the age of
artificial intelligence". Jens Hinrichsen, from ''
magazine, writes in his detailed review of the film that it once again dismantles the myth of apoliticism and brings the problem of its aesthetics to the present. The film does not view the main character from a "safe distance" but instead brings her into the present. The selected material often works as a mirror of current events. "At its core, Riefenstahl
deals with a perverted concept of beauty that conceals the other side of what is beautiful, superior, and victorious — the supposedly unworthy, sick, weak, and also the foreign". In summary, Hinrichsen states that parallels can be drawn with Instagram filters, beauty mania, and body shaming from her work, which celebrates the cult of the perfect body, especially in her film Olympia''". "Leni Riefenstahl may not be innocent of the fact that beauty broke away from the triad of the true, the beautiful, and the good". Xan Brooks, film critic for the British newspaper
The Guardian, writes that Leni Riefenstahl returns to the festival as the star of Andres Veiel's 'extraordinarily profound documentary'. "It was here in Venice that her career peaked before falling into -. The film shows this story and how Riefenstahl tried and failed to save her reputation". The film acknowledges her role as a pioneer: "an ambitious artist in a male-dominated industry whose poetic eye and technical talent turned the medium upside down [...] But the film also shows the ways in which her work is inextricably linked to Nazism - full of it, determined by it - which can never be seen in isolation as innocent and immaculate". Thomas Schultze, from the movie portal
Spot, comes to the conclusion that "Leni Riefenstahl's blindness, as Andres Veiel's film makes clear, is the blindness of an entire country that doesn't want to take responsibility, that doesn't want to learn from what happened, that prefers to look away and deny, thus opening the door to a new look at an abyss that was thought to have been overcome". On
Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, the film holds a score of 82 out of 100 based on 17 critics, indicating "universal acclaim". == References ==