The Hitler Youth (German: Hitler-Jugend (help·info), abbreviated HJ) was a paramilitary organization of the Nazi Party. It existed from 1922 to 1945. The HJ was the second oldest paramilitary Nazi group, founded one year after its adult counterpart, the Sturmabteilung (the SA). It was made up of the Hitlerjugend proper, for male youth ages 14–18; the younger boys' section Deutsches Jungvolk for ages 10–14; and the girls' section Bund Deutscher Mädel (BDM, the League of German Girls).
The first NSDAP-related organization of German youth was the Jugendbund der NSDAP. Its establishment by the Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei or NSDAP, the German Nazi Party, was announced on 8 March 1922 in the Völkischer Beobachter, and its inaugural meeting was held on 13 May the same year. In April 1924 the Jugendbund der NSDAP was renamed Grossdeutsche Jugendbewegung (Greater German Youth Movement).
Another Youth group was established in 1922 as the Jungsturm Adolf Hitler (help·info). Based in Munich, Bavaria, it served to train and recruit future members of the Sturmabteilung (or "Storm Regiment"), the adult paramilitary wing of the NSDAP.
Walter Elias "Walt" Disney (December 5, 1901 – December 15, 1966) was an American film producer, director, screenwriter, voice actor, animator, entrepreneur, entertainer, international icon, and philanthropist, well known for his influence in the field of entertainment during the 20th century. Along with his brother Roy O. Disney, he was co-founder of Walt Disney Productions, which later became one of the best-known motion picture producers in the world. The corporation is now known as The Walt Disney Company and had an annual revenue of approximately US$36 billion in the 2010 financial year.
Disney is particularly noted as a film producer and a popular showman, as well as an innovator in animation and theme park design. He and his staff created some of the world's most well-known fictional characters including Mickey Mouse, for whom Disney himself provided the original voice. During his lifetime he received four honorary Academy Awards and won 22 Academy Awards from a total of 59 nominations, including a record four in one year, giving him more awards and nominations than any other individual in history. Disney also won seven Emmy Awards and gave his name to the Disneyland and Walt Disney World Resort theme parks in the U.S., as well as the international resorts Tokyo Disney Resort, Disneyland Paris, and Hong Kong Disneyland.
Adolf Hitler (German: [ˈadɔlf ˈhɪtlɐ] ( listen); 20 April 1889 – 30 April 1945) was an Austrian-born German politician and the leader of the National Socialist German Workers Party (German: Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (NSDAP), commonly referred to as the Nazi Party). He was chancellor of Germany from 1933 to 1945 and dictator of Nazi Germany (as Führer und Reichskanzler) from 1934 to 1945. Hitler is commonly associated with the rise of fascism in Europe, World War II, and the Holocaust.
A decorated veteran of World War I, Hitler joined the German Workers' Party, precursor of the Nazi Party, in 1919, and became leader of the NSDAP in 1921. In 1923, he attempted a coup d'état, known as the Beer Hall Putsch, in Munich. The failed coup resulted in Hitler's imprisonment, during which time he wrote his memoir, Mein Kampf (My Struggle). After his release in 1924, Hitler gained popular support by attacking the Treaty of Versailles and promoting Pan-Germanism, antisemitism, and anticommunism with charismatic oratory and Nazi propaganda. After his appointment as chancellor in 1933, he transformed the Weimar Republic into the Third Reich, a single-party dictatorship based on the totalitarian and autocratic ideology of Nazism. His aim was to establish a New Order of absolute Nazi German hegemony in continental Europe.
Even the worst of us deserves a mother.
Plot
The Doers of Coming Deeds" is a story about a group of friends, all members of the Hitler Youth, who begin to question Hitler's final solution. When confronted with a Jewish family fleeing from the fanatics of the SS, friendship and duty begin to conflict. It is a deep and exciting story where the best and worst of humanity confront each other during the Second World War
Plot
Adolf Hitler faces himself and must come to terms with his infamous career in an imaginary post-war subterranean bunker where he reviews historical films, dictates his memoirs and encounters Eva Braun, Josef Goebbels, Hermann Göring and Sigmund Freud.
Keywords: alternative-history, anti-semitism, archive-footage, aryan, blonde, blood, bunker, character-study, death-camp, dictation
If he looked in the mirror, what would he see?
[first lines]::Adolf Hitler: Before us lies Germany, within us marches Germany, and after us comes Germany!
Adolf Hitler: The original footage, the original... reality, the truth, is now lost to them forever. The future führers must understand, no matter how carefully you plan or execute your production, you can never get it exactly right. But with editing... a Black Magic... I have edited the imagination of people not yet born.
[last lines]::Adolf Hitler: All this madness... the destruction... the human suffering... I, too, was trapped in the whirlwind we created - an empty mirror filled with hate. I expected God to reach down and stop me... but He never did. Please... please say something. Please help me.
Plot
Adolf Hitler faces himself and must come to terms with his infamous career in an imaginary post-war subterranean bunker where he reviews historical films, dictates his memoirs and encounters Eva Braun, Josef Goebbels, Hermann Göring and Sigmund Freud.
Keywords: alternative-history, anti-semitism, archive-footage, aryan, blonde, blood, bunker, character-study, death-camp, dictation
If he looked in the mirror, what would he see?
[first lines]::Adolf Hitler: Before us lies Germany, within us marches Germany, and after us comes Germany!
Adolf Hitler: The original footage, the original... reality, the truth, is now lost to them forever. The future führers must understand, no matter how carefully you plan or execute your production, you can never get it exactly right. But with editing... a Black Magic... I have edited the imagination of people not yet born.
[last lines]::Adolf Hitler: All this madness... the destruction... the human suffering... I, too, was trapped in the whirlwind we created - an empty mirror filled with hate. I expected God to reach down and stop me... but He never did. Please... please say something. Please help me.
Plot
Adolf Hitler faces himself and must come to terms with his infamous career in an imaginary post-war subterranean bunker where he reviews historical films, dictates his memoirs and encounters Eva Braun, Josef Goebbels, Hermann Göring and Sigmund Freud.
Keywords: alternative-history, anti-semitism, archive-footage, aryan, blonde, blood, bunker, character-study, death-camp, dictation
If he looked in the mirror, what would he see?
[first lines]::Adolf Hitler: Before us lies Germany, within us marches Germany, and after us comes Germany!
Adolf Hitler: The original footage, the original... reality, the truth, is now lost to them forever. The future führers must understand, no matter how carefully you plan or execute your production, you can never get it exactly right. But with editing... a Black Magic... I have edited the imagination of people not yet born.
[last lines]::Adolf Hitler: All this madness... the destruction... the human suffering... I, too, was trapped in the whirlwind we created - an empty mirror filled with hate. I expected God to reach down and stop me... but He never did. Please... please say something. Please help me.
Plot
In Berlin in the early 1940s, romance is forbidden between the young countess who is studying veterinary medicine and a young man she meets at the home of a former professor. But they fall in love. She gets involved in helping Jews escape from the Nazis. All get out of Berlin except the young man. There is a room in her apartment where he can't be seen through the windows and a chest converted into a sofa where she and her brothers played hide-and-seek as children. This real life hide-and-seek game has high stakes. The movie is said to be based on a true story.
Keywords: 1940s, based-on-novel, based-on-true-story, berlin-germany, bombing, escape, hiding-jews, high-society, holocaust, independent-film
Plot
Grim story of a WWII squad consisting of an anonymous sergeant and four long-time survivors who ignore the faceless replacements who continually arrive and die.
Keywords: 1940s, africa, apple, army, army-life, assassination-plot, baby, barbed-wire, battle, blood
The real glory of war is surviving.
Only chance could have thrown them together. Now, nothing can pull them apart.
[the Sergeant affixes a cloth red '1' to his uniform. The Captain is drinking from a bottle of booze]::The Sergeant: What do you think?::The Captain: What the hell is it?::The Sergeant: It's a "one". First Infantry Division. The Red One; think General Pershing will like it?::The Captain: Oh, sure.::The Sergeant: I got the idea from the cap of a Hun I killed.::The Captain: When?::The Sergeant: About an hour ago::The Captain: Did he yell out anything?::The Sergeant: Oh, the same old Kaiser stuff, you know, "the war's over," all that junk.::[the Captain hands him the bottle]::The Captain: Finish it.::The Sergeant: Sir?::The Captain: Finish it. The Armistice was signed, at eleven o'clock this morning. The war's been over for four hours. You didn't know it was over.::The Sergeant: ...*He* did.::Zab: [narrating] A quarter of a century later that piece of cloth from a dead Hun's hat had become famous all over the world. It was the insignia of the First Infantry Division. The Fightin' First. The Big Red One.
Zab: [narrating] You know how you smoke out a sniper? You send a guy out in the open and you see if he gets shot. They thought that one up at West Point.
Zab: [narrating] By now we'd come to look at all replacements as dead men who temporarily had the use of the arms and legs. The came and went so fast and so regularly that sometimes we didn't even learn their names. Truth is, after a while, we sort of avoided gettin' to know them.
Zab: [narrating] The Bangalore Torpedo was 50' long and packed with 85 pounds of TNT and you assembled it along the way. By hand. I'd love to meet the asshole who invented it.
[the troop stops before a memorial]::Johnson: Would you look at how fast they put the names of all our guys who got killed?::The Sergeant: That's a World War One memorial.::Johnson: But the name's are the same.::The Sergeant: They always are.
Zab: I'll be a son-of-a-bitch. My mother sold my novel to Hollywood for Humphrey Bogart and Edward G. Robinson.::Vinci: [doing a Robinson imitation] Hey, how much?::Zab: For fifteen thousand bucks!
Kaiser: Did I kill the guy that killed me?::The Sergeant: Yes.
Griff: I can't murder anybody.::The Sergeant: We don't murder; we kill.::Griff: It's the same thing.::The Sergeant: The hell it is, Griff. You don't murder animals; you kill 'em.
Johnson: [concerning a woman in labor] How do you say "push" in French?::The Sergeant: Poussez.::Johnson: [to woman] Pussy! Pussy! Pussy!
The Sergeant: [helping to deliver the baby] You get the head. I'll do the "poussez"-ing.
Plot
In Nazi Germany in 1936 seven men escape from a concentration camp. The camp commander puts up seven crosses and, as the Gestapo returns each escapee he is put to death on a cross. The seventh cross is still empty as George Heisler seeks freedom in Holland.
Keywords: 1930s, apple, based-on-novel, beer, bicycle, bloodstains, church, church-bell, clock, clothes-line
Daringly Real . . . Startlingly Frank! The revealing novel of a hunted man's search for love!
Bruno Sauer: Come in. You want to see me? What can I do for you? [Sauer is at the mirror, shaving with a straight razor]::Paul Roeder: I bring you the regards of a mutual friend. I wonder if you still remember him. He was with you once on a canoeing excursion. [Sauer pauses and looks frightened, then continues shaving]::Bruno Sauer: I'm afraid I don't understand. Whose regards are you bringing me?::Paul Roeder: It was more than three years ago. You said to him that if there was ever something big he wanted done, he could count on you.::Bruno Sauer: I still don't understand at all. I think you must have the wrong address. You'll have to excuse me. I'm afraid your friend put you in touch with the wrong man. I happen to be in a great hurry just now. Hedy! Will you show this man the door, Hedy? [He continues shaving, but he cuts himself]
Frau Hedy Sauer: I heard what he said.::Bruno Sauer: Did you see the little rat slipping around? He tried to drag me into something.::Frau Hedy Sauer: You've cut yourself. He was speaking of George Heisler, wasn't he?::Bruno Sauer: How do I know?::Frau Hedy Sauer: Who was he?::Bruno Sauer: I never saw the fellow before.::Frau Hedy Sauer: But he seemed to know what you had said to Heisler.::Bruno Sauer: He might very well have been the Gestapo.::Frau Hedy Sauer: He might very well have been sent by Heisler! You didn't even try to find out. You're a coward.::Bruno Sauer: How could I be sure?::Frau Hedy Sauer: You've been telling yourself for years that someday you would do something. You never really meant it. You've been fooling yourself, excusing your own weakness. Today you had your chance, and you didn't take it.::Bruno Sauer: Hedy!::Frau Hedy Sauer: You were afraid!::Bruno Sauer: Hedy, please, why do you torture me? What's wrong between us?::Frau Hedy Sauer: What do you think? When I left home to marry you, it was because everything there was repulsive to me. My father, my brothers, their way of living. I think sometimes of the plans you used to have. What's become of them? The things you used to say, the things you planned to do.::Bruno Sauer: I can't help it. I don't dare to risk anything. My home, my family, you. I'm very much in love with you, Hedy.::Frau Hedy Sauer: You've chosen the wrong way to keep me. I'd risk all this, all of it. It's no use to me now, because I've lost my respect for you. It's a shame. It shouldn't have happened.
Bruno Sauer: I came because I had something to tell you.::Leo Hermann: We haven't seen you for some time. Sit down.::Bruno Sauer: No, thank you. I'll just tell you, and then I'll go. A man came to see me this morning. I had never seen him before, but what he told me may be something in which you are interested. He said he came with a message from a mutual friend. He didn't name the mutual friend, but I think he was speaking of George Heisler. You all know that Heisler escaped from Westhofen and is hiding somewhere in the city. He needs help. I think that's why he sent the man to me. I couldn't be sure the man was what he said he was, so I sent him away. I think now I may have been mistaken.::Leo Hermann: What was the messenger's name?::Bruno Sauer: I don't know. He didn't tell me.::Leo Hermann: What did he look like?::Bruno Sauer: Small, slight, sandy-haired and freckled. Clothes - he might have been a factory worker. He wore glasses.::Franz Marnet: That must be...::Bruno Sauer: I don't blame you for not being willing to speak in front of me. I'll go now. I've told you all I know.::Leo Hermann: Wait. Sit down. You've done a great deal for us. Franz, who's the man?::Franz Marnet: Paul Roeder. It must be Paul Roeder. Little? A wide mouth? A manner like a boy? I'm not sure where he lives, but I know the neighborhood. I'll inquire at the market.
Leo Hermann: Welcome home.::Bruno Sauer: Thank you for speaking of your plans in front of me. It's a good feeling.
Plot
In Nazi Germany in 1936 seven men escape from a concentration camp. The camp commander puts up seven crosses and, as the Gestapo returns each escapee he is put to death on a cross. The seventh cross is still empty as George Heisler seeks freedom in Holland.
Keywords: 1930s, apple, based-on-novel, beer, bicycle, bloodstains, church, church-bell, clock, clothes-line
Daringly Real . . . Startlingly Frank! The revealing novel of a hunted man's search for love!
Bruno Sauer: Come in. You want to see me? What can I do for you? [Sauer is at the mirror, shaving with a straight razor]::Paul Roeder: I bring you the regards of a mutual friend. I wonder if you still remember him. He was with you once on a canoeing excursion. [Sauer pauses and looks frightened, then continues shaving]::Bruno Sauer: I'm afraid I don't understand. Whose regards are you bringing me?::Paul Roeder: It was more than three years ago. You said to him that if there was ever something big he wanted done, he could count on you.::Bruno Sauer: I still don't understand at all. I think you must have the wrong address. You'll have to excuse me. I'm afraid your friend put you in touch with the wrong man. I happen to be in a great hurry just now. Hedy! Will you show this man the door, Hedy? [He continues shaving, but he cuts himself]
Frau Hedy Sauer: I heard what he said.::Bruno Sauer: Did you see the little rat slipping around? He tried to drag me into something.::Frau Hedy Sauer: You've cut yourself. He was speaking of George Heisler, wasn't he?::Bruno Sauer: How do I know?::Frau Hedy Sauer: Who was he?::Bruno Sauer: I never saw the fellow before.::Frau Hedy Sauer: But he seemed to know what you had said to Heisler.::Bruno Sauer: He might very well have been the Gestapo.::Frau Hedy Sauer: He might very well have been sent by Heisler! You didn't even try to find out. You're a coward.::Bruno Sauer: How could I be sure?::Frau Hedy Sauer: You've been telling yourself for years that someday you would do something. You never really meant it. You've been fooling yourself, excusing your own weakness. Today you had your chance, and you didn't take it.::Bruno Sauer: Hedy!::Frau Hedy Sauer: You were afraid!::Bruno Sauer: Hedy, please, why do you torture me? What's wrong between us?::Frau Hedy Sauer: What do you think? When I left home to marry you, it was because everything there was repulsive to me. My father, my brothers, their way of living. I think sometimes of the plans you used to have. What's become of them? The things you used to say, the things you planned to do.::Bruno Sauer: I can't help it. I don't dare to risk anything. My home, my family, you. I'm very much in love with you, Hedy.::Frau Hedy Sauer: You've chosen the wrong way to keep me. I'd risk all this, all of it. It's no use to me now, because I've lost my respect for you. It's a shame. It shouldn't have happened.
Bruno Sauer: I came because I had something to tell you.::Leo Hermann: We haven't seen you for some time. Sit down.::Bruno Sauer: No, thank you. I'll just tell you, and then I'll go. A man came to see me this morning. I had never seen him before, but what he told me may be something in which you are interested. He said he came with a message from a mutual friend. He didn't name the mutual friend, but I think he was speaking of George Heisler. You all know that Heisler escaped from Westhofen and is hiding somewhere in the city. He needs help. I think that's why he sent the man to me. I couldn't be sure the man was what he said he was, so I sent him away. I think now I may have been mistaken.::Leo Hermann: What was the messenger's name?::Bruno Sauer: I don't know. He didn't tell me.::Leo Hermann: What did he look like?::Bruno Sauer: Small, slight, sandy-haired and freckled. Clothes - he might have been a factory worker. He wore glasses.::Franz Marnet: That must be...::Bruno Sauer: I don't blame you for not being willing to speak in front of me. I'll go now. I've told you all I know.::Leo Hermann: Wait. Sit down. You've done a great deal for us. Franz, who's the man?::Franz Marnet: Paul Roeder. It must be Paul Roeder. Little? A wide mouth? A manner like a boy? I'm not sure where he lives, but I know the neighborhood. I'll inquire at the market.
Leo Hermann: Welcome home.::Bruno Sauer: Thank you for speaking of your plans in front of me. It's a good feeling.