The provocative documentary was banned in Israel on the ground that it projects a sympathetic image of Adolf Hitler.
When the film opened in Paris, a stolen print from a cinema screening of the film was found strewn before a monument to victims of Nazis in a local cemetery. A bomb was also found in a cinema showing it, but it failed to go off. The incidents were attributed to an anti-fascist group.
The Washington Post called Swastika "the most potent of anti-Nazi films."
This film's opening prologue reads: ''If the human features of Hitler are lacking in the image of him that is passed on to posterity, if he is dehumanised and shown only as a devil, any future Hitler may not be recognised, simply because he is a human being. What you are about to see is authentic material shot in Nazi Germany. Scenes of Hitler's private life are from his own personal films.''
Noticed something interesting at 1:05:09; man scrubbing the toes of a statue, six or seven on the right foot. Is there some extra natural reasoning for these extra digits, possibly due to Adolf Hitler's curiosity of the supernatural.