Nazi propaganda: anti-Polish

Identifier
irn1001669
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 1995.147.1
  • RG-60.0903
Dates
1 Jan 1941 - 31 Dec 1941
Level of Description
Item
Languages
  • German
Source
EHRI Partner

Creator(s)

Scope and Content

This feature film opens in the German village of Emilienthal in the Polish district of Luzk in March 1939 as Polish authorities close a German school to turn it into a military police post. The teacher Maria Thomas constantly complains to the Polish mayor. Other Germans are angry about higher taxes for ethnic Germans and growing expropriations of land and houses. Maria's husband refuses to sing the Polish anthem and he is beaten up by Polish thugs who are said to thrive for the 'annihilation of...German pigs'. He dies because the police and the hospitals refuse to help Germans at all. Maria's father is shot and blinded in a Polish ambush. A German woman is stoned to death by Poles. After listening to Hitler's radio address on September 1, 1939 promising to take action against the Polish government because of harassment against the German minority, hundreds of Germans are arrested and imprisoned in inhumane conditions. Polish plans to kill all of the prisoners are disrupted as German warplanes shell the prison and German tanks invade the town. In the final scene, covered wagons travel "heim in ein neues, starkes Reich" [home into a new and powerful Reich] passing a German border sign and a huge picture of Hitler, while the German national anthem plays in the background. This Austrian film addresses the situation of ethnic and cultural minorities living in the newly established multi-ethnic states of Central Europe after the Versailles Treaty as well as the practice of 'resettling' ethnic Germans living in Soviet-occupied territory to Germany as agreed upon in the secret Ribbentrop-Molotov-Agreement of August 23, 1939. Here, the German minority in Volhynia (Eastern Poland) is depicted as clinging to its German heritage in language and culture despite living outside the boundaries of Germany for 250 years. Aggressive Polish nationalism leads to growing persecution and denial of rights for these Volksdeutsche [ethnic Germans]. As a result, the minority develops even stronger bonds with their people and homeland, climaxing in their "Heimkehr" [coming home] to Germany. As early as December 1939, Goebbels conceived of producing a feature film about the Volhynian Germans. This "Staatsauftragsfilm" [film commissioned by the state] premiered on August 31, 1941 at the Biennale in Venice and was awarded a prize. After passing censorship on August 26, 1941 the movie publicly premiered in Vienna on October 10, 1941 distinguished as "Film der Nation" [Film of the Nation], "staatspolitisch und kuenstlerisch besonders wertvoll" [state-politically and artistically especially valuable] and "jugendwert" [of worth for the youth). Despite the broad press campaign orchestrated by Goebbels the movie's estimated loss was 423,000 RM with production costs of 4,020 million RM. It was screened to audiences of ethnic Germans and resettlers in occupied parts of Poland and in the Generalgouvernement with more positive results. Furthermore it was shown to welcoming audiences in the Netherlands and Japan.

Note(s)

  • Length of entire film: 94 minutes. The film was shot from January 2, 1941 to June 1941 in Vienna and in Chorzele (Generalgouvernement). A descriptive and interpretative scene protocol with many still images of the movie can be found in Trimmel, Gerald. Heimkehr. Strategien eines nationalsozialistischen Films (Wien 1998), pp. 71-136. Censorship number: 55.978 Other credits: Script: Gerhard Menzel Music: Willy Schmidt-Gentner Cast: Paula Wessely as Maria Thomas, Attila Hoerbiger as Ludwig Launhard, Peter Petersen as Dr. Thomas, Ruth Hellberg as Martha Launhardt, Elsa Wagner as midwife, Berta Drews as Elfriede, Gerhild Weber as Josepha Manz, Carl Raddatz as Dr. Fritz Mutius, Otto Wernicke as Old Manz, Werner Fuetterer as Oskar Friml, Eduard Koeck as Herr Schmid, Hermann Erhardt as Karl Michalek, Franz Pfaudler as Balthasar Manz, Eugen Preiss as the Jewish trader Salomonsohn, Heinz Engelmann, Andrews Engelmann The Austrian Gustav Ucicky also directed "Fluechtlinge" ["Refugees"] from 1933-34 depicting the heroic struggle of Volga Germans against their Slav oppressors and was banned from work as a film director from 1945 until 1947. The Austrian Paula Wessely was awarded the title Staatsschauspielerin [actress of the state] in 1938, she was banned from work as an actress 1945 to 1946. Most of the Polish characters were played by Polish actors, who were tried for treason and collaboration with the enemy in Warsaw in 1948. See Film and Video departmental files for more documentation and a summary of the film. See Story 903, Film ID 33 for the continuation of this film.

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