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Duration=90Minute
Genres=Sci-Fi director=Gille Klabin audience score=770 vote Creator=Carl W. Lucas 6,9 of 10 Stars


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The wave movie 2016. I just saw this. I loved The Wave, and this was just as good. The wave movie streaming. It seems like all the landmark experiments in the history of psychology that we refer back to all the time would be considered unethical today. Has ethics brought us to a self-imposed end of knowledge. The wave movie hindi dubbed. The wave movie explained.
Great movie with wonderful CGI. The scenery is beautiful and the characters are really likable. I recommend. The wave movie review. The wave movie trailer 2020. The Wave movie. The wave movie in english. The wave movie english version. The wave movie german. Okay wow this looks so good.

Lotta space me vies in recent times. The Wave movie database. The Wave movie page imdb. The Wave Genre Drama Based on Account by Ron Jones Screenplay by Johnny Dawkins Directed by Alexander Grasshoff Starring Bruce Davison (Ben Ross) Country of origin USA Original language(s) English Production Executive producer(s) Virginia L. Carter Producer(s) Fern Field Bruce Hendricks (associate producer) Cinematography Hanania Baer Editor(s) Mario Di Mambro Running time 44 mins. Production company(s) T. A. T. Communications Company Distributor Sony Pictures Television (current) Release Original network ABC Original release October?4,?1981 (location) The Wave is a made-for-TV movie directed by Alex Grasshoff, based on The Third Wave experiment put on by teacher Ron Jones in order to explain to his students how the German populace could accept the actions of the Nazi regime during the Second World War. [1] Though later featured as an episode of the ABC Afterschool Special series, this show debuted October 4, 1981, almost two years before being featured in the series. It starred Bruce Davison as the teacher Ben Ross, a character based on Jones. A novelization of the film The Wave, was released in the same year. Ron Jones' writings and Johnny Dawkins' screenplay were also basis of the 2008 German film Die Welle. Summary [ edit] High school social studies teacher Ben Ross shows his class a film about the Holocaust. When the students question how the German people could have allowed such a thing to occur, Ross finds himself unable to answer their questions. Instead he begins a classroom experiment to demonstrate the dangers of fascism. The experiment begins simply, with Ross demonstrating how proper posture and simple rules create greater classroom efficiency. The students follow the new rules so enthusiastically that Ross carries on the experiment the following day by introducing "the Third Wave, " which he claims is a youth movement. Students are issued armbands, taught a secret Wave salute, and are given special duties. Robert, an unpopular student, is assigned the role of a monitor over the other students, which fills him with pride. David, a student in the class, believes that the in-class rules will help the school's football team and begins to teach the Third Wave tenets to his fellow football players. With the popular football players involved, the rest of the school becomes intrigued. By the end of the week, the Third Wave has spread beyond the classroom. Robert, who has developed new confidence and authority due to the movement, becomes one of its more zealous enforcers and reports unorthodox behavior to Ross and the other members. David's girlfriend Laurie is unnerved by the Third Wave, while Ross's wife worries that Ross has introduced a concept he cannot control. The following day, a school pep rally turns into a rally for the Third Wave, causing some 200 more students to join. Laurie decides to write an exposé about the Third Wave for the school paper, causing David to break up with her and her friends to reject her. Other students outside the movement are bullied by the Third Wave and begin voicing their concerns to parents and administrators, who in turn complain to Ross. Ross begs for enough time to complete the experiment. When the exposé is published, the Third Wave denounces the school paper and singles out Laurie for hostility. Fearing for her safety, David warns her to stop speaking out, eventually growing violent enough to push her to the ground. This causes David to realize how far things have gone. David and Laurie visit Ross and beg him to speak out against the movement. Ross, realizing the experiment is out of control, promises them that he will put an end to it. The following day in class, Ross tells students that the Third Wave is a real youth movement taking place in schools all over the country and that the movement's leader will give a televised speech at a rally the following day. The Third Wave students eagerly gather to watch the speech, only to be shown a film of Adolf Hitler. Ross announces that this is their leader and that the experiment proves how quickly a group can give up their individual beliefs. The stunned students throw away their armbands and leave the rally, but Robert, who has been given his first sense of belonging by the movement, is left in tears. Ross takes Robert away to console him. Awards [ edit] The Wave won a 1982 Emmy for Outstanding Children's Program, and a 1981 Peabody Award. It also won a 1981 Young Artist Award for Best Television Special - Family Enjoyment. Writer Johnny Dawkins was nominated for a 1982 Humanitas Prize in the 60 minute category, and a 1983 Writers Guild of America Award for Best Children's Show. References [ edit] External links [ edit] The Wave on IMDb Various incarnations of the Third Wave story The Wave Home Official website: story history, FAQ, links, etc. by original Wave students v t e Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Children's Program 1950?1975 Time for Beany (1950) Time for Beany (1951) No Award (1952) Time for Beany (1953) Kukla, Fran and Ollie (1954) Lassie (1955) Lassie (1956) No Awards (1957?1959) The Huckleberry Hound Show (1960) Young People's Concert (1961) New York Philharmonic Young People's Concerts with Leonard Bernstein (1962) Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color (1963) Discovery (1964) No Award (1965) A Charlie Brown Christmas (1966) Jack and the Beanstalk (1967) Sesame Street (1970) Sesame Street (1971) Sesame Street (1972) ABC Afterschool Special / The Electric Company / Sesame Street / Zoom (1973) Marlo Thomas and Friends in Free to Be... You and Me (1974) Yes, Virginia, There Is a Santa Claus (1975) 1976?2000 Huckleberry Finn / You're a Good Sport, Charlie Brown (1976) Ballet Shoes (1977) Halloween Is Grinch Night (1978) Christmas Eve on Sesame Street (1979) Benji at Work (1980) Donahue and Kids (1981) The Wave (1982) Big Bird in China (1983) He Makes Me Feel Like Dancin' (1984) American Playhouse (" Displaced Person ") (1985) WonderWorks (" Anne of Green Gables ") (1986) Jim Henson's The Storyteller ("Hans My Hedgehog") (1987) Hallmark Hall of Fame (" The Secret Garden ") (1988) Free to Be... a Family (1989) A Mother's Courage: The Mary Thomas Story (1990) You Can't Go Home Again: A 3-2-1 Contact Extra (1991) Mark Twain and Me (1992) Avonlea / Beethoven Lives Upstairs (1993) CBS Schoolbreak Special ("Kids Killing Kids / Kids Saving Kids") (1994) The World Wildlife Fund Presents "Going, Going, Almost Gone! Animals in Danger" (1995) Peter and the Wolf (1995) How Do You Spell God? (1997) Muppets Tonight / Nick News Special Edition: What Are You Staring At? (1998) The Truth About Drinking: The Teen Files (1999) The Color of Friendship / Goodnight Moon and Other Sleepytime Tales (2000) 2001?present The Teen Files: Surviving High School (2001) Nick News Special Edition ? Faces of Hope: The Kids of Afghanistan (2002) Through a Child's Eyes: September 11, 2001 (2003) Happy to Be Nappy and Other Stories of Me (2004) Classical Baby / Nick News with Linda Ellerbee: Never Again? From the Holocaust to the Sudan (2005) High School Musical / I Have Tourette's but Tourette's Doesn't Have Me (2006) Nick News with Linda Ellerbee ? Private Worlds: Kids and Autism (2007) Classical Baby (I'm Grown Up Now): The Poetry Show / Nick News with Linda Ellerbee: The Untouchable Kids of India (2008) Wizards of Waverly Place / Grandpa, Do You Know Who I Am? with Maria Shriver / Nick News with Linda Ellerbee ? Coming Home: When Parents Return from War (2009) Wizards of Waverly Place: The Movie / Nick News with Linda Ellerbee ? The Face of Courage: Kids Living with Cancer (2010) A Child's Garden of Poetry / Nick News with Linda Ellerbee ? Under the Influence: Kids of Alcoholics (2011) Wizards of Waverly Place / Sesame Street: Growing Hope Against Hunger (2012) Nick News with Linda Ellerbee ? Forgotten But Not Gone: Kids, HIV & AIDS (2013) One Last Hug: Three Days at Grief Camp (2014) Alan Alda and the Actor Within You: A YoungArts Masterclass (2015) It's Your 50th Christmas, Charlie Brown! (2016) Once Upon a Sesame Street Christmas (2017) The Magical Wand Chase: A Sesame Street Special (2018) When You Wish Upon a Pickle: A Sesame Street Special (2019).
The wave movie download. The wave movie youtube. The wave movie trailer 2019. The Wave movie maker. The wave movie2020. The wave movie trailer. The Wave Theatrical release poster Directed by Roar Uthaug Produced by Are Heidenstorm Written by John Kåre Raake Harald Rosenløw-Eeg Starring Kristoffer Joner Ane Dahl Torp Jonas Hoff Oftebro Edith Haagenrud-Sande Fridtjov Såheim Thomas Bo Larsen Music by Magnus Beite Cinematography John Christian Rosenlund Edited by Christian Siebenherz Production company Film Väst Distributed by Nordisk Filmdistribusjon Magnolia Pictures Release date 28?August?2015 Running time 105 minutes [1] Country Norway Language Norwegian Budget $6 million [2] [3] Box office $12. 8 million [4] The Wave ( Norwegian: Bølgen) is a 2015 Norwegian disaster film [5] directed by Roar Uthaug. It was Norway's official submission for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 88th Academy Awards but failed to be nominated. [6] [7] [8] The movie depicts a future event in Møre og Romsdal in which the Åkerneset [ no] crevasse collapses, creating an avalanche resulting in an 80 meter tall tsunami that destroys everything in its path. A sequel titled The Quake ( Norwegian: Skjelvet), directed by John Andreas Andersen, was released on 31 August 2018. [9] Plot [ edit] Kristian Eikjord ( Joner), an experienced geologist, is having his final day of duty in the famous Norwegian tourist destination Geiranger, and is scheduled to move to Stavanger with his family. After a small farewell feast with his colleagues at the Åkerneset monitoring station, sensors on the mountain indicate groundwater has disappeared. The team tells Kristian not to worry, they will check it out. Later, Kristian and his children are leaving while his wife Idun ( Torp) works at the local hotel for a few more days. Waiting for the ferry, Kristian has an epiphany after observing surrounding events and rushes back to the geology center, leaving his children Sondre (Oftebro) and Julia (Sande) in the car. There, he convinces them the waters are having a profound effect on the crevasse. He heads up by helicopter with Jacob, where they find the instrument-connected wires have snapped. Kristian's former boss Arvid ( Såheim) agrees to enter a higher state of alert, but refuses to press the evacuation alarm based on the current evidence. Having done what he can, Kristian returns to his car, but finds the children were impatient and went to the hotel. There, he apologizes and Idun tells the children to sleep at the hotel for the night, but Julia wants to say goodbye to their house by spending one last night there. Kristian drives home with her to stay there one last time. Meanwhile, Sondre is bored in his hotel room and heads down to the basement with headphones to skateboard. Instrument calculations indicate contraction changes in the crevasse, thus Arvid and Jacob head there to check the "C-pumps" (used to measure specific conditions), they find the readings are accurate and not a malfunction. Kristian reviews his old documents and finds contractions can be a sign of an upcoming avalanche, due to water pressure changing within the mountain. Kristian dials the station and orders his colleagues to evacuate Arvid and Jacob from the crevasse immediately and sound the outdoor warning alarms to alert the residents of Geiranger that there is an imminent threat of a tsunami. Moments later, the avalanche happens; Arvid decides to sacrifice himself, linking Jacob to their zip-line after his foot is trapped, falling to his death shortly after. As feared, the rockslide crashes into the fjord and creates a gigantic tsunami approximately 80 meters high roaring towards Geiranger. With ten minutes on the countdown, Kristian rushes to Geiranger with Julia to pick up his wife and son, but Idun orders them to ascend to safety. She and her colleague Vibeke desperately attempt to evacuate the hotel patrons onto a waiting bus, but Sondre is nowhere to be found. Time is quickly running out, but Idun refuses to leave him. Two Danish tourists (Maria and Philip Poulsen) are following her on the search. Kristian and Julia are stuck in traffic trying to get up the mountain, and realizing their altitude is dangerously low, they start running uphill on foot, yelling for everyone else to do the same. During the rush, a man forgets to set the car's brake, causing it to roll backwards and trap Anna's leg (Kristian's former neighbor). Kristian sends Julia up the mountain with Thomas (Anna's husband) and Teresa, their daughter. With seconds until wave impact, Kristian seats himself and Anna in a van in a desperate attempt to survive. The tsunami engulfs the vehicle into a chaotic underwater maelstrom. Idun finds Sondre, but the tsunami approaches too quickly. Rushing back downstairs to the basement's bomb shelter, the wave strikes the hotel violently and washes Maria away, forcing Idun to close the shelter's door after convincing Philip that Maria is already dead. Kristian realizes he miraculously survived the maelstrom, but finds Anna next to him dead, having been impaled by a large piece of debris. After Kristian finds Julia alive, he leaves her with Thomas and his daughter, while he heads back to Geiranger to find the rest of his family. The town has been wiped off the map, and he finds the evacuation bus, filled with dead passengers, including Vibeke. Realizing Idun and Sondre are not among them, he heads to the ruins of the hotel. Down in the bomb shelter, the water level rises and deforms the door, which is blocked by heavy debris. With the situation worsening, Philip panics and pushes Idun and Sondre underwater in a frenzied attempt to breathe. Unable to calm him down, Idun is forced to drown him. Kristian finds his son's backpack in one of the rooms, and feeling hopeless, he furiously bangs some exposed pipes with a metal rod. The noises are heard by Idun and Sondre, who then respond in like. Kristian tracks the noise to the bomb shelter, but as he dives, further damage occurs to the hotel, causing water to flood where they are taking refuge. He removes the heavy debris and reunites with Idun, but as he returns with Sondre, he runs out of air (after giving some to his panicked son). Idun heads back for him and begins a desperate attempt to revive him. While it seems Kristian has drowned and Idun accepts his death, Sondre gives one last frantic effort at revival, which pays off. The family is reunited at Ørnesvingen, and the film closes saying the events are likely to occur in the future, but the exact date is unpredictable. Cast [ edit] Kristoffer Joner as Kristian Eikjord, a 40-year old experienced geologist [2] Ane Dahl Torp as Idun Eikjord, Kristian's wife Jonas Hoff Oftebro as Sondre Eikjord, Kristian's son Edith Haagenrud-Sande as Julia Eikjord, Kristian's daughter Thomas Bo Larsen as Phillip Poulsen, a Danish tourist Mette Horn as Maria Poulsen Fridtjov Såheim as Arvid Øvrebø, Kristian's former boss Herman Bernhoft as Georg Arthur Berning as Jacob Vikra Silje Breivik as Anna, one of Eikjord's neighbours Laila Goody as Margot Valldal, Arvid's assistant Eili Harboe as Vibeke, Idun's hotel colleague Production [ edit] Development [ edit] Norway is a rockslide prone area (created by the Caledonian orogeny) and The Wave is based on a rock-slide tsunami incident which destroyed the village of Tafjord on 7 April 1934, killing 40 people. [2] Prior to that, a similar incident in 1905 triggered a tsunami killing 60 people, and 31 years later, another 74 lost their lives. [11] Uthaug has always been a fan of Hollywood disaster films such as Twister and Armageddon and had long wanted to make a disaster film in Norway. [2] According to him the challenge was to combine the elements of the American genre film with the reality of the situation in Norway. [2] All the actors performed their own stunts, something the director said was "utterly nerve-racking. " And for a climatic scene, in which Joner tries to rescue his family from a flooded hotel, he trained with free-diving instructors to be able to hold his breath for three minutes underwater. [2] Release [ edit] The Wave had its international premiere at the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival on 16 September 2015. [12] Box office [ edit] The film sold around 800, 000 tickets in Norway, [2] and grossed a total of US$8. 2 million at the Norwegian box office becoming the highest grossing film of 2015 in Norway. [13] Awards and accolades [ edit] At the 2016 Amanda Awards, The Wave received the award for Best Norwegian Film in Theatrical Release, as well as the awards for Best Sound Design and Best Visual Effects. [14] In addition, the film was also nominated in the categories of Best Norwegian Film, Best Director, Best Cinematography, and Best Music. [15] At the Kanon Awards for 2016, The Wave won for Best Male Actor in a Leading Role ( Kristoffer Joner), Best Producer, Best Editing, and Best Production Design ( Lina Nordqvist). [16] Critical reception [ edit] The film received positive reviews from critics, with praise aimed at the performances of the cast (mostly the two protagonists), cinematography, score and visual effects. [17] [10] Deborah Young of The Hollywood Reporter called the film "an exotic edge-of-seater [that] plays on the beauty and terror of nature" and "a thrilling ride", [3] while chief international film critic Peter Debruge of Variety described it as "an equally impressive tsunami-peril thriller. " [17] The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported that 83% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 108 reviews, with an average rating of 6. 64/10. The site's critics consensus states: "Well-acted and blessed with a refreshingly humanistic focus, The Wave is a disaster film that makes uncommonly smart use of disaster film clichés. " [18] Metacritic reports a weighted average score of 68 out of 100 based on 26
© 2016 Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. and LSC Film Corporation. All Rights Reserved. © 2016 Layout and Design Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved. For Ratings Reasons: | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use. The Wave Theatrical release poster Directed by Dennis Gansel Produced by Rat Pack Filmproduktion Christian Becker Screenplay by Dennis Gansel Peter Thorwarth Ron Jones (novel & diary) Based on The Wave by Morton Rhue Starring Jürgen Vogel Frederick Lau Max Riemelt Jennifer Ulrich Music by Heiko Maile Distributed by Constantin Film Release date 18?January?2008 ( Sundance) Running time 107 minutes Country Germany Language German Budget ? 5 million Box office ?23, 679, 136 [1] Die Welle ( The Wave) is a 2008 German socio-political thriller film directed by Dennis Gansel and starring Jürgen Vogel, Frederick Lau, Jennifer Ulrich and Max Riemelt in the leads. It is based on Ron Jones ' social experiment The Third Wave and Todd Strasser 's novel, The Wave. The film was produced by Christian Becker for Rat Pack Filmproduktion. It was successful in German cinemas, and after ten weeks, 2. 3 million people had watched it. Plot [ edit] A school teacher of history, Rainer Wenger, is forced to teach a class on autocracy, despite being an anarchist. When his students, third generation after the Second World War, [2] do not believe that a dictatorship could be established in modern Germany, he starts an experiment to demonstrate how easily the masses can be manipulated. He begins by demanding that all students address him as "Herr Wenger", as opposed to Rainer, [3] and places students with poor grades beside students with good grades?purportedly so they can learn from one another and become better as a whole. When speaking, they must stand and give short, direct answers. Wenger shows his students the effect of marching together in the same rhythm, motivating them by suggesting that they could really annoy the anarchy class, which is below them. Wenger suggests a uniform, to remove class distinction and further unite the group. Mona argues it will remove individuality, as well. Karo shows up to class without the uniform and is ostracized. The students decide among themselves they need a name, deciding on "Die Welle" (The Wave). Karo suggests another name, which ends up with one single vote cast by herself. The group is shown to grow closer and the bully Simon is shown to reform, protecting a classmate from other bullies. He also creates a distinctive salute for the group. Karo and Mona protest the actions of the group, and Mona, disgusted with how her classmates are embracing fascism, leaves the project group. The other classmates don't see her departure as a connection with fascism and continue attending. The members of The Wave begin spray-painting their logo around town at night, having parties where only Wave members are allowed to attend, and ostracizing and tormenting anyone not in their group. Tim becomes very attached to the group, having finally become an accepted member of a social group. He burns his brand clothes, after a discussion about how large corporations do not take responsibility for their actions. A pair of punks start a fight with Tom, but he is saved by Bomber and Sinan and starts to bond with them. When Tim and his group of new friends are confronted by a group of angry punks (including those that Tim faced previously), Tim pulls a Walther PP pistol, causing them to back down. Tim explains to his shocked friends that the pistol only fires blanks. Tim later shows up at Wenger's house, offering to be his bodyguard. Wenger declines his offer but invites Tim in for dinner. This puts further strain on Wenger's already tense relationship with his wife, Anke, who thinks his experiment has gone too far. Wenger finally ejects Tim from his house, only to find in the morning that the boy had slept on his doorstep. Anke is upset upon learning of this, and tells Wenger to stop the experiment immediately. He accuses her of being jealous and insults her dependency on pills to be able to show up to work. Shocked, she leaves him, saying The Wave has made him a bad person. Karo continues her opposition to The Wave, earning the anger of many in the group, who ask her boyfriend, Marco, to do something about it. A water polo competition is due that day, and Wenger asks The Wave to show up in support of the team. Karo and Mona, denied entry to the competition by members of The Wave, sneak in another way to distribute anti-Wave fliers. Members of The Wave notice this and scramble to retrieve the papers before anybody reads them. In the chaos, Sinan starts a fight with an opposing team member, the two almost drowning each other. Members of The Wave in the stands begin to violently shove one another. After the match, Marco confronts Karo and accuses her of causing the fight. She replies that The Wave has brainwashed him completely, and he slaps Karo, causing her to get a nosebleed. Unsettled by his own behavior, Marco approaches Wenger and asks him to stop the project. Wenger agrees and calls a rally for The Wave members for the following day in the school's auditorium. Once in the rally, Wenger has the doors locked and begins whipping the students into a fervor. When Marco protests, Wenger calls him a traitor and orders the students to bring him to the stage for punishment. Wenger uses this to test the students to see how extreme the Wave has become. Wenger declares he is disbanding the Wave, but Dennis argues that they should try to salvage the good parts of the movement. Wenger points out that there is no way to remove the negative elements from fascism. Tim draws a gun and refuses to accept the Wave is over, fearing that he will once more be lonely and states that the Wave is his life. When Bomber says the gun only fires blanks, Tim shoots him to prove the pistol has live rounds. Wenger tries to calm Tim, who is now aiming the gun at him. When Tim demands why he shouldn't shoot Wenger too, Wenger says that without him, there would be no one to lead The Wave. Tim abruptly shoots himself instead, preferring to commit suicide rather than go on living without The Wave. Wenger cradles his corpse and looks helplessly at his now traumatized students. The film ends with Wenger being arrested by the police and driven away, Bomber being taken away to the hospital, and Marco and Karo being re-united. The final images show Wenger in the back of a police car, staring into the camera overcome with distress. Cast [ edit] Jürgen Vogel as Rainer Wenger, the teacher who started the experiment with his class. Frederick Lau as Tim, an insecure, mentally unstable student who has had problems with his family. At the beginning of the film he is pictured as a drug dealer until The Wave project starts. Then he becomes a committed member and finds new friends. Max Riemelt as Marco, a strong boy, who plays in Wenger's water polo team. He is Karo's boyfriend. Jennifer Ulrich as Karo, a diligent and intelligent student. She protests against The Wave and because of this, she has intense rows with Marco and her friends. Cristina do Rego as Lisa, a shy girl who becomes more self-confident thanks to The Wave. She is best friends with Karo, but later they have an argument when Karo protests against The Wave. Christiane Paul as Anke Wenger, is the wife of Rainer and teaches in the same school. Elyas M'Barek as Sinan, a student of Turkish descent and member of the water-polo team. He is Bomber's best friend. Elyas M'Barek had earlier appeared in Gansel's film Mädchen, Mädchen. Maximilian Vollmar as Bomber, a bully who reforms thanks to The Wave and befriends Tim. Maximilian Mauff as Kevin, an upperclass student who clashes with The Wave at first until he joins the group for social reasons as he loses his status. Jacob Matschenz as Dennis, a student who comes from the GDR. He becomes a member of The Wave, like most of his classmates. Ferdinand Schmidt-Modrow as Ferdi Tim Oliver Schultz as Jens Amelie Kiefer as Mona Odine Johne as Maja Fabian Preger as Kaschi Tino Mewes as Schädel Maxwell Richter as Anarchist Liv Lisa Fries as Laura Alexander Held as Tim's father Johanna Gastdorf as Tim's mother Dennis Gansel as Martin Maren Kroymann as Dr. Kohlhage Background [ edit] The Wave is not the only movie to convert a social experiment conducted in the United States into a fictionalized plot. The Stanford prison experiment of 1971 was adapted for the 2001 production Das Experiment by Oliver Hirschbiegel, and the 2015 production directed by Kyle Patrick Alvarez, The Stanford Prison Experiment. Gansel's Wave is based on teacher Ron Jones's "Third Wave" experiment, which took place at a Californian school in 1967. Because his students did not understand how something like national socialism could even happen, he founded a totalitarian, strictly-organized "movement" with harsh punishments that was led by him autocratically. The intricate sense of community led to a wave of enthusiasm not only from his own students, but also from students from other classes who joined the program later. Jones later admitted to having enjoyed having his students as followers. To eliminate the upcoming momentum, Jones aborted the project on the fifth day and showed the students the parallels towards the Nazi youth movements. [4] [5] In 1976, Jones published a narrative based on those experiences titled " The Third Wave ", which was made into a television movie of the same title in 1981. In the same year, Morton Rhue published his book "The Wave", which was published in Germany in 1984 and has since enjoyed great success as a school literature text. It has sold a total of over 2. 5 million copies. [4] [5] [6] Furthermore, the 1981 movie is available at almost all public media centers. [6] [7] The story has also influenced many plays and role plays worldwide. [4] [5] The screenplay is based on an article written by Ron Jones i
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