A propaganda piece about the occupation of post-Nazi Germany and what led to WWII.A propaganda piece about the occupation of post-Nazi Germany and what led to WWII.A propaganda piece about the occupation of post-Nazi Germany and what led to WWII.
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See "General Patton, A Soldier's Life" by Stanley Hirshson, published 2002.
I have seen the film but have not seen the similar film for Japan, which I understand is even more strident.
It is interesting that Dr. Seuss (Theodore Geisel) made Army training films that received academy awards (Oscars).
Dr Seuss's script shows a far uglier side to his persona than the cat in the hat. The film is essentially a crass (though I fear successful) attempt to entrench racist ideas about Germany in the American soldiers sent after Germany's WWII defeat. Germans are portrayed as inherently evil human beings. American Soldiers are warned to be on their guard that those wily Germans are likely to slap their lederhosen and drink beer and be merry in the hope that their essential evil and cruelty might go unnoticed. The audience is left in no doubt that to fraternise with a German is to succumb to the trickery of the most irredeemable despicable evil that human nature could offer. Nazism is not political but an inevitability of the German race.
Watch this film and think about Muslim fundamentalists on TV. Or think about the Grinch.
** 1/2 (out of 4)
WW2 propaganda film from director Capra tells young troops why they should overtake Germany as well as why they should put them in the ground so that they can never rise up again. The film tells how Germany has always been evil and when given a second chance they ruin in and send another person like Hitler. I know these films were made to rally troops during WW2 but looking at them today you can't help but call them rather racist. This film here at least says you should respect their customs yet it then follows that by saying you shouldn't talk to their people because you can't trust them. The film runs just over ten-minutes and pretty much tries to pump up Americans and throw a fear factor into things. This is certainly a film of its era and I'm sure most will find it boring but if you're interested in these films its not too bad.
It's powerful, direct, no-nonsense stuff, skillfully put over and fascinating to watch. It is very different from anything one would usually associate with Frank Capra or Dr. Seuss.
Did you know
- TriviaA number of sentences from the narration of this movie were sampled in the 1987 single "Don't Argue" by Cabaret Voltaire.
- Quotes
Narrator: Don't let it fool you. You are in enemy country. Be alert. Suspicious of everyone. Take no chances.
Narrator: The German lust for conquest is not dead. It's merely gone undercover.
Narrator: Guard particularly against this group. These are the most dangerous: German youth.
Narrator: They were brought up on straight propaganda.
Narrator: Don't argue with them. Don't try to change their point of view.
Narrator: You will not argue with them. You will not be friendly. You will be aloof. Watchful and suspicious. Every German is a potential source of trouble.
Narrator: They cannot come back into the civilized fold just by sticking out their hand and saying, "I'm sorry". Don't clasp that hand. It's not the kind of a hand you can clasp in friendship.
Narrator: Trust none of them. Some day the German people might be cured of their disease: the super-race disease, the world-conquest disease. But they must prove that they have been cured, beyond the shadow of a doubt, before they ever again are allowed to take their place among respectable nations.
- ConnectionsEdited into Hitler Lives (1945)
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- Runtime13 minutes
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- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1