The Delegation

1970
7.5| 1h40m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 09 September 1970 Released
Producted By: Office de Radiodiffusion Télévision Française
Country: Switzerland
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Journalist Will Roczinsky is dead. He was investigating UFO sightings. A TV broadcast summarizes the events up to his death. When broadcast at the time, viewers believed to be watching a documentary instead of a teleplay.

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Director

Rainer Erler

Production Companies

Office de Radiodiffusion Télévision Française

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The Delegation Audience Reviews

ClassyWas Excellent, smart action film.
Breakinger A Brilliant Conflict
Deanna There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.
Bob This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.
Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de) "Die Delegation" or "The Delegation" is a West German German-language film from 1970, so it had its 45th anniversary last year. However, also two more countries worked on this one and there are parts in English in here. This is one of writer and director Rainer Erler's most known works. He made this one in his 30s and he is still alive today. These 100 minutes are what we would call a mockumentary today. It is documentary style from start to finish, but it is all fictitious. The movie is about the disappearance and death of journalist Will Roczinsky, who apparently got a bit too deep into alien investigations for his own good. The film is not really about the death though. We find out right away that he died. It is more about investigating the circumstances and finding out what exactly happened to him. I myself must say that I did not like the watch too much. The bleak style certainly helped in making it more realistic, but it also caused this film to look less interesting I think. And the topic could not keep me curious for over 1.5 hours. But audiences back then were different and I can see why many were intrigued by the watch and even thought this was real. Real or not, this was not really compelling to watch. Not even close. I give it a thumbs-down.
pontram When I saw "Die Delegation" somewhere in the seventies, I was totally caught by the atmosphere and the main actor. Walter Kohut, as a stoic, imperturbable reporter, hunting the unknown, had possibly his best role ever. His sonorous voice alone bears a significant part of the movie.In the beginning we learn that the main character, said reporter, named Will Roczinsky, is dead, and that there is footage found from his voyage that led to his death. After that, the footage is shown.For a movie from 1970, the announcement of the footage (by a well known TV show moderator of that time, if I'm not wrong) is very convincing. The footage itself is artfully made like real footage, and many people then thought it was real.The footage shows sometimes - if one follows the tension - frightening things, frightening with no amount of gore or horror or monsters, but with pieces of mystery and imagination.I am no movie specialist, but I would say, this movie is a mother at least for the genre of "Found Footage" movies, and maybe the "X-Files" from a technical point of withholding information from the audience, or at least not interpreting it, to raise tension.No movie since, in my personal opinion, used the mockumentary style more sophisticated.Besides that, we also follow the fate of a man whose personal integrity, whose life, and whose mental stability fades while hunting the shadows of the unknown. He meets persons who encountered the unknown, he tries to stay at the usual reporter's distance, but he fails while being trapped in his obsession to find the extraterrestrials or at least their traces.I would highly recommend this little masterwork for a remake. It could be funny with all the UFO hysteria since, and those millions of fakes today, in a world where no place seems to be Iphone-free anymore, and where every child can fake an UFO encounter with it's laptop in a few minutes and upload it to Youtube.
Ron Altman Astounding film about reporter Kohut, who does some research for a German TV station about a U.F.O. sighting in Canada and, thinking he is really on to something, jeopardizes his career by continuing the investigation obsessively. Interviewing witnesses and experts, Kohut comes closer and closer to revealing the truth. Most intriguingly, his story is revealed post-mortem by showing the reels of film discovered in his wrecked car. Remarkable science-fiction mockumentary caused some viewers to panic when originally broadcast. Fascinating, thought-provoking, a must-see, much too little-known. From conspiracy specialist Erler (FLEISCH, PROFESSOR COLUMBUS).
Turan A German TV journalist is sent to a UFO congress and meets several crackpots plus a Canadian lady who suspects she has had an encounter with alien astronauts. He begins to research into her story, with amazing results.The UFO congress actually took place in Mainz, Germany. The rest is so well-invented that the TV station got several letters like "this is the story of the century, why don't you do anything?!"