Infamous National Socialist propaganda film, whose plot centers on the ideological conversion of a working-class family: Communist youth organizations versus the Hitler Youth in early 1930’s Berlin. Heini Völker, printing apprentice and son of a Communist, aligns with the Hitler Youth and informs on a Communist plot against them. After converting his father as well to National Socialism, Heini is accepted as a Quex in the Hitler Youth. He is brought down and killed by Communists amidst a propaganda-campaign in his working-class district. —filmportal.de
Hans Steinhoff (1881-1945) Bavarian film director born in Marienberg on 10 March 1881, Hans Steinhoff abandoned his medical studies to become a theatre actor and director, before embarking on a new career in the cinema in 1922. A prolific, if frequently mediocre film maker (more than forty productions), whose choice of themes under the Third Reich was often dictated by opportunism, Steinhoff became widely known as the director of the first Nazi film, Hitleriunge Quex, the story of the Hitler Youth martyr Heinz Norkus. Made in 1933 at the dawn of the Third Reich, at a time when the Nazi dictatorship was not yet firmly consolidated, the film is interesting chiefly as a document of the prevailing mood of the times and Nazi readiness to integrate the communists into the national community. Steinhoff’s other films tended to be on the heavy side, grandiloquent but lacking in imagination, though his cinematic biographies,Robert Koch (1939), Ohm Krüger (1941) and Rembrandt (1941). were not… read more