The full-length silent film conceived in the UFA's cultural department shows
sport,
gymnastics and
dance performances, but also the Roman
bathing culture, in order to demonstrate not only intellectual education but also physical fitness based on the example of ancient
gymnasiums and
personal grooming. Physical exercise in the great outdoors was intended for
preventive healthcare and prevent postural damage in adults caused by imbalanced seated occupations and the
health promotion of children, but it was also a life-reforming (
Lebensreform) alternative to the
decadence of city life with anxieties, lack of exercise and
tobacco consumption as well as national movement based on the model of gymnastics father
Friedrich Ludwig Jahn. The film's scientific advisor was the German
physician Nicholas Kaufmann, who also wrote the script. In contrast to traditional military sports, the film expressly addresses women, for example with gymnastics according to
Bess Mensendieck, and shows sports training in a civilian function, for example for
self-defense or
rescue swimming. Aesthetically, the film stages the human body in the style of
classical antiquity by recreating numerous ancient scenarios and shows it extremely freely for the time. Studies in
slow motion illustrate the muscular effect of individual exercises and movement sequences. The film features the first on-camera appearance of
Leni Riefenstahl. The film is divided into six parts with the titles: • Part one: The Ancient Greeks and the New Era • Part two: physical training for the sake of health: hygienic gymnastics • Part three: rhythmic gymnastics • Part four: the dance • Part five: sport • Part six: fresh air, sun and water In the fifth part, numerous athletes of their time are shown, for example: • High jump:
Leroy Brown (U.S.),
1924 Summer Olympics in Paris, 1.96 meters •
Charlie Paddock, America's best sprinter training •
Hubert Houben (Germany) beats the Olympic champions Paddock and
Murchison (U.S.) as well as
Porritt and
Carr (Australia) in the 100-meter sprint • H.H. Meyer, America's best
hurdler • Fencing: The Nadis' from Livorno, a family of famous fencers •
Aldo Nadi, the Italian champion •
Nedo Nadi, the world champion, winner of the
1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm and
1920 Summer Olympics in Antwerp In the sixth part "a good example of national leaders" like: •
Arthur James Balfour playing tennis and •
David Lloyd George playing golf, as well •
John D. Rockefeller playing golf at the age of 85 • the
Norwegian royal family on skis •
Benito Mussolini on horseback (later cut out) as well as • the German poet and
Nobel Prize in Literature Gerhart Hauptmann and his wife on the beach in
Rapallo ==Reception==