Un tratado anti-nazi mezclado con imágenes de noticiarios de 1938 muestra a una chica americana casada con un alemán que poco a poco se entera de que es un nazi e intenta llevar a su hijo a ... Leer todoUn tratado anti-nazi mezclado con imágenes de noticiarios de 1938 muestra a una chica americana casada con un alemán que poco a poco se entera de que es un nazi e intenta llevar a su hijo a América.Un tratado anti-nazi mezclado con imágenes de noticiarios de 1938 muestra a una chica americana casada con un alemán que poco a poco se entera de que es un nazi e intenta llevar a su hijo a América.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado en total
- Train Traveller
- (as Frederick Vogeding)
- Train Conductor
- (as William Kaufman)
- Storm Trooper
- (sin créditos)
- Customs Official
- (sin créditos)
- French Broadcaster
- (sin créditos)
- Petty Official
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
This was controversial, inflammatory stuff at the time of its release, and Fox pulled the picture from theaters soon afterward. It's certainly one of the most unequivocal anti-Nazi American movies from before the war that I've seen. Bennett is good as the increasingly alarmed surrogate stand-in for Americans unaware or unwilling to face what was happening in Europe. Anna Sten is very hissable as the fanatical Nazi adherent that tries to sway Lederer's mind and heart.
Carol and Eric Hoffman (Joan Bennett and Francis Lederer) are living in the States when the movie begins. Eric was born in Germany but has lived in America a decade. Carol is an American--born and raised. The Hoffmans take their son to Germany for a visit and soon Mrs. Hoffman is aghast at the hate and viciousness she sees. What's worse...over time, she sees her husband buying into the Nazi rhetoric more and more. Pretty soon she's worried...can she even get out of Germany. And, more importantly, can she do so with her young son?
This movie doesn't pull punches. It talks about Dachau, prisoners being murdered in the camps and chalking it up to things like Apendicitis, Storm Troopers abusing non-Aryans and more. As I already said, though, it's not like any of this was much of a surprise to audiences, as by 1940 the war had been raging a year. Still, it's very well written and acted and holds up very well today. Nearly as good as contemporary films like "The Mortal Storm".
Lederer is a German who had settled in America and married an American girl Bennett and they have a young son in Johnny Russell. They hear that his father Otto Kruger is getting on in years and his business in the old country is falling apart. He wants his son to return to the old country and help straighten things out.
So Lederer packs his family up and returns to Germany and he get enthralled with Hitler. He's taken with the fine industrial machine that the Nazi state has made and feels pride in his nationality. His father of the older generation is not so impressed. Bennett is frightened by her surroundings and she gains a sympathetic ear in correspondent Lloyd Nolan.
She's got more problems than that. Lederer and her have grown apart and he's taken up with a Third Reich true believer in Anna Sten. You remember that Samuel Goldwyn made three attempts to make her a star and couldn't sell her. A pity because in The Man I Married she really stands out as the fanatical Nazi woman. She'd have made a great Magda Goebbels in a film.
The Man I Married was also unique in that it tackled anti-Semitism in a very dramatic climax scene. Darryl F. Zanuck and 20th Century Fox deserve a lot of credit for making this most timely film in 1940.
Bennett plays Carol Hoffman, an editor, happily married to a German, Eric Hoffman (Lederer), for 8 years. They have a son named Ricky (Johnny Russell) and live in New York City. In 1938, Eric learns that he needs to return to Germany to take care of some business concerning his father's factory, so Carol and Ricky come along.
Eric's feet no sooner touch Deutschland that he begins to take up the Nazi fervor, aided and abetted by an old friend, Greta (Sten). Carol is vocal about not liking what she sees, and Eric keeps telling her not to listen to propaganda.
Finally, Carol realizes the truth about her husband, and with the help of an American journalist covering Berlin (Nolan), she decides to leave Germany with Ricky.
Good movie, great cast, solid performances. I don't know what the atmosphere in 1938 was but somehow I don't think I would have been interested in a trip to Germany. And frankly, Carol had good dose of denial about Eric or she would have left shortly after they arrived.
Otto Kruger is excellent as Eric's father, who feels as if he's lived too long, and Sten gives a strong performance as the unlikable Nazi Freda. Lederer has long been a favorite actor of mine, and here he's handsome and charming as a man ultimately gripped by nationalism.
Bennett is a beautiful, glamorous American woman who realizes how bad things are, and she gives a strong performance, brave in her disapproval and determined not to expose her child to it.
Irving Pichel does a good job of directing, and there is actual footage of Germany in 1938 throughout the film.
The movie was released in August of 1940, so it was probably made after war was declared in Europe, which was in September 1939. The film The Mortal Storm, released in June 1940, talks of the German oppression but never mentions Jews or Nazis. It seems that the studio moguls wanted America to enter the war, and promoted the cause with the films they produced, becoming a little bolder with each film.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaIn a scene where 50 young boys were to wear Nazi uniforms, eight of them walked off the set.
- ErroresWhen Joan Bennett wrestles with her Nazi interrogator, they knock the phone off the desk. The phone very obviously has no cable connected to it.
- Citas
Kenneth Delane: I gather you're one of those people who *pride* themselves on being fair to Nazis.
Carol Hoffman: No, I... I just try to discount propaganda.
Kenneth Delane: That just means that you've swallowed Dr. Goebbels hook, line, and sinker. That's one of Gobble-Gobbles' favorite tricks - making people discount facts.
- ConexionesFeatured in Red Hollywood (1996)
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 17 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1