Hitler's Children (1943 film)

Hitler's Children

Directed by
Produced by Edward A. Golden
Written by
Based on Education for Death
by Gregor Ziemer
Starring
Music by Roy Webb
Cinematography Russell Metty
Production
company
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures
Release dates
  • January 6, 1943 (1943-01-06)
Running time
83 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $205,000[1]
Box office $3,550,000 (US rentals)[2][3]

Hitler's Children is a 1943 American black-and-white propaganda film made by RKO Radio Pictures. It was directed by the Canadian-American director, Edward Dmytryk, from an adaptation by Emmet Lavery of Gregor Ziemer's book Education For Death.[4]

Hitler's Children stars Tim Holt, Bonita Granville, and Kent Smith. One of the most financially successful films of RKO Studios, the film is known for portrayal of brutalities associated with the Hitler Youth, represented particularly by two young participants. A line from one of the movement's songs is featured in the film: "For Hitler we will live and for Hitler we will die" (translated from German).

Plot

In 1933 Berlin, Professor Nichols (Kent Smith) runs the American Colony School. It is next to the Horst Wessel School, where young Germans are indoctrinated into Nazism. During a brawl between the student bodies, Karl Bruner (Tim Holt), a German youth born in the United States, objects when Anna Muller (Bonita Granville), a US citizen born in Germany, smacks him with her baseball bat. The students are attracted to each other despite this beginning. Anna's parents had sent her to Germany to be educated, although they allowed her to go to the American school. Soon, the professor, Anna, and Karl become good friends, though they do not agree politically. After a while though, they lose touch with each other.

Six years later, as war looms in Europe, Karl Bruner, now a lieutenant in the Gestapo, removes students of the "wrong" nationalities from the American School. Anna is taken out although by then she is working as an assistant teacher. As she was born in Germany to German parents, the German government classifies her as German despite her US citizenship.

Nichols tries to find Muller, but the U.S. consulate has no power and Anna's German grandparents are too frightened to help. Nichols' friend Franz Erhart (Lloyd Corrigan) suggests that the professor get permission from the Ministry of Education to inspect a certain labor camp, where Muller is likely being held. Nichols happens to meet Gestapo Colonel Henkel (Otto Kruger) and his aide and protégé Bruner. Henkel approves Nichols' request to visit Muller but, in private, the young Bruner tries to dissuade Nichols. He says that Muller has become "a model German." Nichols cannot believe this and finds he is right when he speaks privately with Muller at the camp. She discourages Nichols from trying to rescue her, as it would be too dangerous and stands little chance of success.

Bruner recommends Muller for an advanced "Geopolitik" course at a German university but, when interviewed by Henkel and Dr. Graf (Hans Conried) of the education department, Anna turns down the opportunity, fearing they intend her to become a spy against the US. She is sent back to the camp and demoted from the staff to a laborer. Learning that she has engaged in anti-Nazi behavior, Henkel orders her to be sterilized. When Bruner learns of this, he tries to persuade Anna to pretend to be a good Nazi and bear his child to prove her usefulness to Germany, but she refuses.

She runs away from the camp and reaches Berlin, where she hides in a Roman Catholic church. A search party finds her and takes her away over the protests of the bishop (H. B. Warner). Henkel orders her to receive ten lashes and sends Bruner to witness her punishment. After she is whipped the second time, Bruner stops the action, although he knows he has doomed himself and Anna.

Bruner pretends to have realized his mistake and recants. Henkel however arranges for a national radio broadcast of the trial of Bruner and Muller. He promises Karl full honors at his funeral. Professor Nichols is ordered to leave Germany immediately or he will be arrested as an accessory to treason. At the airport, Nichols hears Karl use his opening statement to denounce Hitler's Germany before the young man is shot and killed. Anna is shot and killed as she rushes to Karl.

Cast

Production

Originally Hitler's Children was helmed by Irving Reis, the director got into a spat with the producer, Edward A. Golden, and expected RKO to back him up. He was surprised by being released and replaced by Edward Dmytryk. [5]

Reception

Hitler's Children was reviewed in The New York Times, where reviewer Bosley Crowther considered the melodrama to be "obvious, conventional". He further noted,"Edward Dmytryk, who directed, has set the whole thing in an oratorical style and has given it the quality of a philippic rather than a credible story from life."[4]

Despite lukewarm critical reviews, Hitler's Children was a massive hit and earned RKO a profit of $1.21 million.[1][6] It was the fourth-highest grossing film of the year and RKO's most successful film of the year. The writer and director were each given $5,000 bonuses for their work.[7] The film is also one of Granville's most recognized performances other than her Nancy Drew films.

So successful was this film that RKO used Edward Dmytryk to direct other war films. He directed Back to Bataan, starring John Wayne; The Young Lions, and the smash hit of the 1950s, The Caine Mutiny. The last war film he made was Anzio (1968).[5]

See also

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 Jewel, Richard. "RKO Film Grosses: 1931–1951." Historical Journal of Film Radio and Television, Vol. 14, No 1, 1994, p. 41.
  2. "Which cenema ilms have earned the most money since 1947." The Argus (Australia), March 4, 1944, p. 3. Retrieved: August 6, 2012.
  3. "Top Grossers of the Season." Variety, January 5, 1944, p .54.
  4. 1 2 Crowther, Bosley. "Review: 'Hitler's Children', fictionalized version of 'Education for Death,' makes its appearance at the Paramount Theatre." The New York Times, February 25, 1943.
  5. 1 2 Staffprd. Jeff. "Articles: 'Hitler's Children'." Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved: August 10, 2016.
  6. Jewell 2016
  7. Jewell and Harbin 1982, p. 181.

Bibliography

  • Jewell, Richard B. Slow Fade to Black: The Decline of RKO Radio Pictures. Oakland, California: University of California Press, 2016. ISBN 978-0-5202-8966-6.
  • Jewell, Richard B. and Vernon Harbin. The RKO Story. New Rochelle, New York: Arlington House, 1982. ISBN 978-0-5175-4656-7.

External links

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