In the depths of the Great Depression and in the waning days of the crumbling Weimar Republic, a poor Berlin youth is torn between loyalty to his unemployed Communist father and his ever-gro... Read allIn the depths of the Great Depression and in the waning days of the crumbling Weimar Republic, a poor Berlin youth is torn between loyalty to his unemployed Communist father and his ever-growing fascination of the Hitler Youth movement.In the depths of the Great Depression and in the waning days of the crumbling Weimar Republic, a poor Berlin youth is torn between loyalty to his unemployed Communist father and his ever-growing fascination of the Hitler Youth movement.
- Heini Völker
- (as Ein Hitlerjunge)
- Fritz Dörries
- (as Ein Hitlerjunge)
- Ulla Dörries
- (as Ein Hitlermädchen)
- Grundler
- (as Ein Hitlerjunge)
- Kowalski
- (uncredited)
- Ausrufer (barker)
- (uncredited)
- Arzt (doctor)
- (uncredited)
- Althändler (furniture dealer)
- (uncredited)
- Lebensmittelhändler (grocer)
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
1. Utter bewilderment at its propaganda value; the Communists seem to modern eyes to have far the best deal, with beer, food and sex high on their agenda, yet the young Heini - and presumably the 12-year-olds in the audience - are won over totally by the promise of shiny shoes, cups of tea, boy scout uniforms, cold morning dips and strident community singing. Beats me. 2. No comedy or light relief in any way: no town drunk, sly spiv, amusing slapstick with planks, etc. Was 1930s Berlin really that humourless? 3. What a rabble the Nazi youth seemed - gawky and indisciplined, far from the ruthlessly efficient robots of our imagination. 4. The only two decent actors in the whole thing are the two Commie blokes. Heini's dad turns in a convincing performance as the drunken old bully who personifies the Red Menace. 5. Getting short trousers to fit evidently beyond scope of even the well-organised Hitlerjugend. Every pair two sizes too small. 6. Chilling role played by gas. As a film "it's pants", as modern 12-year-olds might say (possibly echoing point 5). But as a grim piece of political history it is indeed quiet fascinating - and mystifying, as well as enlightening.
I was expecting a lot of overt, outrageous political content. I'm told there is some in the dialogue, but I didn't catch it. Rather its strategy seems to be to avoid hectoring directly, and instead to project an idealized vision of a Germany guided by a paternal National Socialist party. Hence the message is conveyed through idyllic campground scenes, for example. This is the goal that young Quex is willing to defend.
One film "Quex" reminded me of somewhat was "Boys Town" (1938) with Mickey Rooney, but, if I really had to draw a comparison, surprisingly enough it would be to Frank Capra's "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" (1939). There is a scene of our enterprising Hitler Youths organizing themselves -- a little like Mickey and Judy putting on a show -- to turn out a propaganda newspaper in support of their political dreams and aspirations. Do you recall the scene in "Mr. Smith" where Jimmy Stewart's struggle -- Sein Kampf -- against a corrupt and antiquated political system is vindicated through a grassroots campaign organized by a bunch of boys with wagons and a cheap printing press? We know from the later "Why We Fight" series that Frank Capra was intimately familiar with his Nazi cinema. You are free to draw whatever conclusions you'd like.
Did you know
- TriviaHerbert Norkus, born July 1916, was killed, stabbed six times, by German Communists on 24th January 1932, Berlin, as he delivered Nazi Propaganda leaflets. His martyred death became a role-model for the Hitler Youth, and too, exploited in the Nazi propaganda war machine.
- Quotes
Bannführer Kaß: Where were you born?
Vater Völker: In Berlin.
Bannführer Kaß: Where is it?
Vater Völker: Near the Spree.
Bannführer Kaß: Near the Spree, that's right. But where? In what country?
Vater Völker: Well, in Germany, of course.
Bannführer Kaß: In Germany, that's correct. In our Germany. Think about it.
- Crazy creditsHeini Völker, Ulla, her brother Fritz and all other young characters, especially the Hitler Youth characters are credited as Hitler Youth boy, Hitler Youth girl or The Girls and Boys of the Berlin Hitler Youth.
- Alternate versionsThere is an Italian edition of this film on DVD, distributed by DNA srl, "PARACELSUS (1943) + IL GIOVANE HITLERIANO QUEX (1933)" (2 Films on a single DVD), re-edited with the contribution of film historian Riccardo Cusin. This version is also available for streaming on some platforms.
- ConnectionsEdited into Deutschland, erwache! (1968)
- SoundtracksUnsre Fahne flattert uns voran
(Maschlied der Hitlerjugend)
Music by Hans-Otto Borgmann
Lyrics by Baldur von Schirach
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Hitler Youth Quex
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 35m(95 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1