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Post by marshamae on Dec 8, 2017 14:53:35 GMT
TCM US today is showing a string of my favorite genre, Nazi spy films. The espionage is low rent noir, but the social message is often powerful, full of nuance, quirky characters. It's an odd combination of naive and sophisticated that I always find compelling.
All times EST
9:45 - Confessions of a Nazi spy- great cast including Edward G Robinson and George Sanders, about Nazis in the US . Made in 1939 at Warners. Jack Warner was the only studio head to blow off tge German market and straight out confront the Nazi threat.
11:45 - CASABLANCA
1:30 - BERLIN EXPRESS
3:00 MORTAL STORM - my favorite pairing of Margaret Sullavan and James Stewart, with Robert Young and Dan Daily (!) as young Nazis and a very touching performance by Frank Morgan as a Jewish Professor caught up in the maelstrom.
5:00 - Hitler's children- about the Nazi youth movement experienced by an American girl forced to join.
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Post by kijii on Dec 8, 2017 17:11:28 GMT
I just saw this, Marsha, and there is no Dan Daily in it. You do get to see Ward Bond as a Nazi though.....  There is a HUGE case of peer pressure here for everyone in the movie to become a Nazi..Robert Young gives in---but loses Margaret Sullavan in the bargain. I just saw an interesting Nazi movie yesterday---Fritz Lang's Hangmen Also Die!--in which the Prague resistance gets the best of their Nazi "protectors." In a strange way, this movie is a very entertaining high action movie, especially when the underground completely sets up Gene Lockhart in the end. (It's still on my DVR drive, which is another way to "collect movies." instead of buying DVDs.) This, along with Lang's Man Hunt (1941) www.imdb.com/title/tt0033873/reviews-67 makes for an interesting set of action movies from the war years.
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TCM TODAY
Dec 8, 2017 17:19:26 GMT
via mobile
Post by mattgarth on Dec 8, 2017 17:19:26 GMT
But Kijii -- Dan is there all right. He leads the beer hall singing (And picks on the poor old teacher), he leads the book burning ('We burn you!'), and he leads the walkout of Professor Frank Morgan's college class.
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Post by politicidal on Dec 8, 2017 17:22:29 GMT
Ever seen The Master Race (1944)? They showed it a few months ago. Pretty good b-movie about their sabotaging Allies' relations with the locals.
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Post by teleadm on Dec 8, 2017 17:42:16 GMT
Confessions of a Nazi Spy 1939
What I've heard and read was that before Pearl Harbour, USA was restrained to show that Nazis where evil because of neutrality (?), and preasures from the Hays office (who might have had the ear towards the Nazis), and remembering the many American lives taken in Europe by young Americans (Bless them all) during what is now called WW1. Warner Bros representative in Germany at the time was murdered, and Jack Warner's rage created this movie,.
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Post by marshamae on Dec 8, 2017 19:50:36 GMT
All of that Teledean, plus the fear of losing sales to the German market, and German influenced customers throughout Europe. After all it was the depression. It was Harpo Marx of all people who credited Warner for taking a stand . Harpo had visited Germany in the 30's and been horrified. He was not specially political though he had a lot of lefty friends. But his issue was the anti sémitism
Thanks Matt for locating Dan Dailey for KIJI. It was a very early part with no dancing. He appears to be about 12.
I love Hangmen also die. The spy mechanics are a little more sophisticated . I live the scene where they trap Gene Lockhart. It's a good example of American actors performing creditably as Mittel- Europeans , something many found difficult. I'm always interested in stories about Heydrich, a pivital figure in the Holocaust with a complex history. Also love Man Hunt.
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Post by kijii on Dec 9, 2017 0:12:02 GMT
The movie is just too delicious to be totally true. But then, not being familiar with what is true and what is not, I found this user review on the IMDb helpful in that regard, I think..... The opening panel describing "the Hangman," tells us that there is some truth to the background. So why the fictionalized version rather than the real version?
I have an idea: It is more entertaining so show the Czech resistance working as a well-oiled machine to place a Nazi sympathizer, beer magnate, Emil Czaka (Gene Lockhart) in their trap while letting a single Czech Czech resistance worker (Brian Donlevy) go free to carry on the movement.
Each of the major characters in the movie might represent an archetype of a group in reality:
Dr. Franticek Svoboda (Brian Donlevy) = The resistance fighter. Prof. Stephen Novotny (Walter Brennan) = The intellectual victim of the Nazis. The Novotny family = The group "caught up in the middle" of the fight who have to learn how to respond quickly to what is happening. But, strange to say, I found Gestapo Insp. Alois Gruber (Alexander Granach) to be quite humorous at times. As he snapped his fingers (as he as discovered an idea) or pounded his fists (in frustration), he almost looked like a comic book character.... the inspector Jacques Clouseau...of the Nazis.
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Post by petrolino on Dec 9, 2017 2:08:27 GMT
I do like 'Berlin Express', always worth tuning in for.
The movie channel FilmFour here in U K is currently rotating Andre De Toth's 'None Shall Escape' (1944).
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