The year is 1931, and young Heini Volker has a problem. His unemployed
father demands he joins Berlin's young communists. But his heart belongs to the
Hitler Youth. How Heini resolves this quandry is the story of Hitlerjunge Quex,
a movie that became central to the moral instruction of young Germans
throughout the Nazi years. Produced in 1933, just months after Hitler's
ascension to power, Hitlerjunge Quex drew from the real-life story of Herbert
Norkus, a Hitler Youth killed by communist street-fighters in 1932. An
expressly propagandistic vehicle, the film pulls few punches in its depiction
of Depression-era misery and the escalating violence of the Weimar Republic's
last years. Indeed, its bracing realism owes a strong debt to Germany's
left-wing proletarian theater movement - an impression underscored by the
several prominent leftist (or formerly so) actors featured here. Also striking
are the movie's many quotations - a camera angle here, a mise-en-scéne there -
from other Weimar-era classics, from Caligari to Fritz Lang's M and Bertolt
Brecht's Kuhle Wampe. The fascinating result is a film that, more than any
other Nazi-era production, combines hard-scrabble realism with National
Socialist myth-making, its singular portrait of German working-class misery
refracted through the transformative lens of Nazi ideology. An immediate box
office success, the film became a Nazi propaganda staple for years afterwards,
by 1945, an estimated 20 million viewers had paid some degree of witness to
Heini's life and martyrdom. Directed by Hans Steinhoff; music by Hans-Otto
Borgmann; featuring Heinrich George, Berta Drews, and Claus Clausen.
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