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Schtonk!

Original title: Schtonk
  • 1992
  • 16
  • 1h 55m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
4.3K
YOUR RATING
Götz George and Uwe Ochsenknecht in Schtonk! (1992)
ParodySatireTrue CrimeComedyCrime

The slightly fictionalized story of an art forger, a journalist desperate for a big story, and the biggest press scandal in German history: the Hitler Diaries.The slightly fictionalized story of an art forger, a journalist desperate for a big story, and the biggest press scandal in German history: the Hitler Diaries.The slightly fictionalized story of an art forger, a journalist desperate for a big story, and the biggest press scandal in German history: the Hitler Diaries.

  • Director
    • Helmut Dietl
  • Writers
    • Helmut Dietl
    • Ulrich Limmer
    • Peter Märthesheimer
  • Stars
    • Götz George
    • Uwe Ochsenknecht
    • Christiane Hörbiger
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    4.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Helmut Dietl
    • Writers
      • Helmut Dietl
      • Ulrich Limmer
      • Peter Märthesheimer
    • Stars
      • Götz George
      • Uwe Ochsenknecht
      • Christiane Hörbiger
    • 20User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 7 wins & 4 nominations total

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    Top cast39

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    Götz George
    Götz George
    • Hermann Willié
    Uwe Ochsenknecht
    Uwe Ochsenknecht
    • Fritz Knobel
    Christiane Hörbiger
    Christiane Hörbiger
    • Freya von Hepp
    Dagmar Manzel
    • Biggi
    Rolf Hoppe
    Rolf Hoppe
    • Karl Lentz
    Veronica Ferres
    Veronica Ferres
    • Martha
    Ulrich Mühe
    Ulrich Mühe
    • Dr. Wieland
    Martin Benrath
    Martin Benrath
    • Uwe Esser
    Hermann Lause
    • Kurt Glück
    Karl Schönböck
    Karl Schönböck
    • Professor Strasser
    Rosemarie Fendel
    Rosemarie Fendel
    • Mrs. Lentz
    Harald Juhnke
    Harald Juhnke
    • Kummer
    Georg Marischka
    • Von Klantz
    Thomas Holtzmann
    Thomas Holtzmann
    • Notary Cornelius
    Hark Bohm
    Hark Bohm
    • Catholic pastor
    Willy Harlander
    • Bavarian customs officer
    Hans-Joachim Hegewald
    • Schuhback
    • (as Hans Joachim Hegewald)
    Peter Roggisch
    • Obersturmbannführer
    • Director
      • Helmut Dietl
    • Writers
      • Helmut Dietl
      • Ulrich Limmer
      • Peter Märthesheimer
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    7.14.3K
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    Featured reviews

    akirasan

    Farce!

    I don't understand why this German satire, which was nominated for an Oscar for Best Foreign Film, has never been released in NTSC video format. There are numerous lesser foreign films available on video in the US and Canada, but mysteriously not "Schtonk!". I've wanted to see this movie for years and seized the opportunity the other day when I found it at a movie lover's video store (Scarecrow Video, Seattle, WA) in PAL format. This required me to rent a machine that converts the PAL signal, and as I paid the $800 deposit to the store clerk for said machine I joked, "This better be worth the wait" (and the deposit).

    The success of the comedy in "Schtonk!" is due to the fact that it is based in fact. If it weren't for this being an actual event in German history, the ludicrous story would seem just too stupid to be funny. The idiocy of the characters actions is of course embellished, which is why the movie is so good. The magazine reporter desperate for a scandalous scoop is brilliantly played like a man who wants the big story so bad he will believe anything. And he does. Once he stumbles on to the Hitler "diaries" he and the rest of the press can't get enough. This movie obviously works on several levels, some of which I don't quite appreciate being I am not German, but one universal statement is that of the press having the role of gatekeeper, the ability to decide what is a "story", and the consequences when that ability is misused.

    I've seen Uwe Ochsenknecht in a couple of Doris Dörrie movies and found him to be a talented comedic actor. His portrayal of the "diaries" forger is one more great performance. The farcical telling of his role in the hoax serves as a vital display of how absurd and fascinating a story this con was. Such details as his reasoning for using the initials F.H. and his taking on the characteristics of Hitler the deeper he got into his work are hilarious subtleties that play an important part in the greater humor of the entire film. The story did seem to drag on in a couple places, perhaps a little more editing could have been implemented, but that won't deter me from recommending this fun satire or seeing it again and again myself. I've been looking forward to seeing "Schtonk!" for the last 12 years, and now that I've seen it I can honestly say I am not disappointed.
    10wimkok1960

    Great movie

    As usual, it shows that humour is personal. I think the movie is great. The joke-density, visually, musically and verbally is high, and it is superbly performed. Gotz George is a revelation in this role, as he plays mostly rough, real, troubled men. Jokes are painful as well as light-hearted, the musical score is brilliant, and the still present awe for Hitler is prominently presented as well as ridiculed. The drama unfolds in a fast pace, and is over before you know it. I think, the dislikers expected a very much different approach to the theme, e.g. the commentator who promoted the English version of this journalistic farce. I think it is simply not interesting enough to show that Trevor Roper was sorely misled. The whole point of this German movie is that it shows that the whole affair is largely due to the still present enormous awe of the person of Hitler, and that not only in Germany ! The bizarre notion that "history had to be rewritten, with this discovery" is of course nonsense, which was believed by German journalists as well as foreign experts (or should i say "experts" ). For me this movie is a great German achievement!
    mp.visser

    One of the most brilliant German movies

    This film is a must see for everybody who heard of the Hitler diary affair. Although the real affair is larger then life, and, according to many even more absurd that the movie, it is a must see.

    The DVD is excellent, and I have watched it over and over again. Scenes are excellent, the way Christiane Hörbiger is addressed by Götz George, over and over again by the title of her late husband. His obsession for detail in restoring the ship he bought and finding Nazi `nick-nacks' It is all just too much to mention. One thing though, the better you know German, and Germany, the better you will understand the in-jokes. A lot of the humour is very subtle, and even in the comments here is misunderstood. Karl Schönböck for instance just claims to be an intimate friend of the Führer, he never was really, he is an fake, just like the diary's. He is brilliant at it. When Uwe Ochsenknecht is selling a painting of Eva Braun he just painted, as an original, Karl Schönböck claims he was there when Hitler painted it. The film just goes on and on like a rollercoaster and it is just unbelievable that Stern fell for this one. When something sounds to good to be true, it is, is a wisdom many people do not seem to have. However, like in House of Games, David Mamets brilliant movie on how scams work, you cannot cheat an honest man.

    See this movie, buy the T Shirt, read the book, and never trust somebody who wants to make you rich.
    7Levana

    A very German satire

    I saw this film when I was in Germany in '92. Naturally, I didn't get a lot of the jokes, but to judge from the way the audience was laughing, it really struck a chord with them. However, there were many parts of the movie which even for me were very funny, indeed. I suspect that the less familiar American viewers are with German culture and recent history, the less they will appreciate this movie (which has hardly made a ripple here, not surprisingly).
    9Fred_Mopkopf

    Still one of the best German comedies - never unintentionally cheesy, but not too brainy

    Eventually, somebody had to do a film about the Hitler diaries forgery, and of course it always should have been the Germans. It was theirs to do it. But to be honest, I was afraid of it happening, as the German film industry has all too often proven to be a botcher of good premises. But anyway, the Brits did it fist with their series 'Selling Hitler' (which I haven't seen yet), and boy am I glad that the late Helmut Dietl made this wonderful film. It's German to the core, but without selling out to the usual German comedy audience. All the better that it managed to be a huge success in Germany. And one has to admit the courage Dietl had in doing it as a comedy. At the time, Germany's conflicting with its own past still was problematic. Anything to do with Hitler was only to be seen in rationalistic documentaries and TV magazines - which is not wrong at any rate, but anybody knows that looking at such things from a satiric angle has also its value. But for German media this was long out of the question. Before 'Schtonk', being humoresque about Hitler had never really made it into German mainstream.

    Anyway, I won't go into 'Schtonk''s plot details, and unfortunately and obviously some of the humor will be lost on you if you don't speak German; but let me point you to a certain aspect of the film: The acting. Dietl really managed to direct his actors in a way that at the time was not commonplace in Germany. The most blatant example is Götz George's Hermann Willié. My fellow Germans are going to hate me, but I always found George a bit overrated. Yea, he WAS a terrific actor, but not in the way Germans thought (if you want to know more about my stance on German actors, feel free to read my other reviews on German films). George was good when he played himself, which he basically did in his iconic role as Commissioner Schimanski in the long running German 'Tatort' crime TV series. Schimanski's name was basically synonymous for Tatort cops during the 80's in Germany. But once he had to play someone completely else, he was lost. He either drifted in theatre overacting mode or couldn't shake his Schimanski mannerisms (which is why typecasting is not such a bad thing anyway). I think Germans always had a problem recognising that. They just just didn't get it. For example, George was highly praised for his role in 'Der Totmacher', but I was one of the few people who thought that his acting would have been great on the theatre stage but just did not do the film very good. In 'Schtonk' there is also a great deal of overacting across the board to be found, but Dietl uses it in an absolute fitting manner. He especially gets such a fantastic performance out of George that I will always remember it as his best. The mannerisms, the way he utilises George's clipped speaking - it's just perfect for the character. Let me point you to the scene where he confesses to the priest. Just hilarious. And not for a moment you are distracted by any Schimanski residues.

    Now, all that praising of George should not take away from the other actors, nor from the film as a whole. It's just worth a watch, and to quote my own review title: Still one of the best German comedies - never unintentionally cheesy, but not too brainy.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The title is a reference to Le dictateur (1940).
    • Goofs
      When Freya von Hepp hands Hermann Willié Göring's bathrobe and offers him to try it on, Willié's answer doesn't match his almost motionless lips.
    • Quotes

      Fritz Knobel: [writing Hitler's diary] The superhuman effords of the last days create flatulences in the intestinal and Eva says, I have bad breath.

    • Connections
      Featured in The 50th Annual Golden Globe Awards (1993)
    • Soundtracks
      Prologue 1st Act from Lohengrin
      Composed by Richard Wagner

      Performed by the London Philharmonia (as the New Philharmonic Orchestra London)

      Direction by Alfred Scholz

      Courtesy of Selected Sound Musikverlag

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 28, 1993 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Germany
    • Language
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Schtonk
    • Filming locations
      • Odenthal, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany(Dr. Knobel's House)
    • Production company
      • Westdeutscher Rundfunk (WDR)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • DEM 16,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 55m(115 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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