Adolf Hitler (born April 20, 1889 died April 30, 1945) was the leader of the German National Socialist Workers Party and the German Nazi Chancellor of 1933 (FÃÆ'ührer from 1934) until 1945. Hitler has been represented in popular culture since he became a famous politician in Germany. His typical image is often parodied by his opponents. The parody became more prominent outside Germany during the period of his rule. Since the end of Hitler's World War II representation, both serious and satirical, has continued to be prominent in popular culture, sometimes causing significant controversy. In many magazines, books, and movies, Hitler and Nazism fulfilled the role of evil tricks. This treatment is not limited to fiction but is widespread among nonfiction writers who have discussed it in this regard. Hitler still has an appeal from another perspective; among the many comparable examples is the exhibition at the many attended German History Museum.
Video Adolf Hitler in popular culture
Hitler's representation during his lifetime
Many works in the popular music and literature features of Adolf Hitler are clear.
In Germany, before he came to power, Hitler was often depicted satirically in newspaper cartoons and propaganda by political enemies. Photomontagist John Heartfield regularly describes Hitler in an unreasonable way in the design of his anti-Nazi poster. When the Nazis came to national power in January 1933, Hitler was largely portrayed as a god-like figure, beloved and respected by the Germans, as demonstrated for example in the Triumph of the Will, which Hitler co- produced. The exception is the German film Das Testament des Dr. Mabuse ( The Testament Dr. Mabuse ) from 1933, which was banned by the Nazi propaganda ministry. Many critics regard Fritz Lang's portrayal of a murderous maniac who masterminded the criminal empire from within the walls of a psychiatric hospital to become an allegory of Nazi occupation to power in Germany.
Outside Germany, Hitler's personality is often parodied. The 1936 Geneva Bernard Shaw game includes the caricature of Hitler as Herr Battler, appearing in international court with his friends Signor Bombardone (Mussolini) and General Flanco (Franco). There are a lot of cartoons that quip at his distinctive features, as David David did.
After the start of the war
Another early example of vague depictions is the work of Bertolt Brecht in 1941, the Resurrection of Arturo Ui, in which Hitler, in the character of Arturo Ui's main character personality, a Chicago oppressor in cauliflower trade, in cruelly satirised. Brecht, who was German but left when the Nazis came to power, also expressed his opposition to the Socialist and National Fascist movements in other dramas such as Mother Courage and the Fears and Misery of the Third Reich.
Outside Germany, Hitler was mocked or described as a maniac. There are many important examples in contemporary Hollywood movies. Some Three Stooges shorts, the first of which is You Nazty Spy! (1940), the first Hollywood work that hit Hitler and the Nazis in which the children, with Moe Howard portrayed "Moe Hailstone", as Hitler's character, created dictators from the fictional state of Moronika. Briefly it implies that business interests are behind Hitler's rule, and is said to be the short subject of favorite Stooges Moe Howard and Larry Fine. A sequel was released a year later titled I'll Never Heil Again . This one describes the dispute between Hitler and the League of Nations. In the other Three Stooges shorts, Hitler is referred to as "Schicklgruber" referring to the birth name of his father Alois Hitler. First released about nine months after the initial short subject of Nazi-lampoon Stooges, Charlie Chaplin mocks Hitler as "Adenoid Hynkel," the richest dictator of Tomainia, in his 1940 movie The Great Dictator. This is one of Hitler's most recognizable parodies.
Particularly during World War II, Hitler was featured in a variety of animated shorts, including "Der Fuehrer's Face", a 1942 Christmas propaganda cartoon featuring Donald Duck (inspired by the Spike Jones game of a song written by Oliver Wallace ), and Herr Meet Hare with Bugs Bunny. However, Hitler's first appearance on the Warner Brothers cartoon was at Boschi's Picture Show in 1932 in a short joke in which Hitler was shown chasing Jimmy Durante with an ax. George Grosz painting Cain , or Hitler in Hell (1944) shows the dead who attacked Hitler in Hell. Photomontage artist John Heartfield often uses Hitler's image as a target for the thorny satire brand during Hitler's lifetime. In the 1941 movie Fritz Lang
Apart from Hollywood films, Hitler was the subject of several comic superheroes who fought Hitler directly or indirectly in comics published during World War II. The superheroes who fought Hitler included Superman, Captain America, The Shield, and Namor Sub-Mariner. The first Captain America comic shows Captain America hit Hitler in the jaw. The enemies of the American captain, the Red Skull, were founded as apprentices for Hitler. In Superman volume 14, Razan's dictator appears, trying to attack the nearest democracy. Superman defeated his troops, and Razan was shot while trying to escape.
Hitler was ridiculed in satirical folk songs like "Stalin Was not Stallin '" or when new lyrics were created for old songs like "Hitler Has Only Got One Ball" (for the song "Colonel Bogey March ").
Maps Adolf Hitler in popular culture
Hitler's representation after his death
After his death, Hitler continues to be described as incompetent or stupid. However, while Hitler's anti-Semitic policies were famous during his lifetime, it was only after his death that the full degree of Holocaust and other Nazi genocide were known. This, coupled with Hitler is no longer a threat, means that the way he is depicted in popular culture has caused Hitler to be personified as evil.
Hitler's 2003 film The Rise of Evil starred in Robert Carlyle in the title role and described a semi-fictional story of Hitler's life from childhood to new position FÃÆ'ührer und Reichskanzler , completing his ascension to totalitarian, dictatorial power in Germany. However, the film has been criticized for its inaccuracies in portraying Hitler's temperament and related events, to the point that has been likened to fiction.
Moloch (1999), directed by Alexander Sokurov, starring Leonid Mozgovoy, dealt with Hitler's life at Berghof a mountain retreat near Berchtesgaden during the war, drawn from Hitler's Table Talk published after the war.
The last days of Hitler have been depicted in several films, first in Der letzte Akt (1955), directed by Georg Wilhelm Pabst, starring Albin Skoda as dictator; The next is the fifth and final installment of the Soviet film series Liberation (1969-72), directed by Yuri Ozerov, starring Fritz Diez (an actor who generally portrayed Hitler in a number of East German films from 1955). so on). The death of Adolf Hitler, a British television production (January 7, 1973), starring Frank Finlay in the title role, and Hitler: The Last Ten Days (1973), directed by Ennio de Concini, starring Sir Alec Guinness was the first Western contribution. The fifth iteration was the US television film The Bunker (1981), directed by George Schaefer, starring Sir Anthony Hopkins. Finally, there was an Academy Award nomination- Downfall (2004), directed by Oliver Hirschbiegel and starring Bruno Ganz as Hitler. Also portraying Hitler's final hour in the bunker, short film Hundert Jahre Adolf Hitler - Die letzte Stunde im FÃÆ'ührerbunker (1989), directed by Christoph Schlingensief, starring Udo Kier, can not be considered a remake of the thing in on. movies in the proper sense.
Hitler is portrayed in a television miniseries Inside the Third Reich (1982) by Sir Derek Jacobi, who was nominated for an Emmy Award for his performance. Hitler is also portrayed in the movie Valkyrie by David Bamber, who tells the story of the July 1944 bombing experiment in his life.
Another example of Hitler's representation is a comedy like comedy Mel Brooks The Producers featuring a satir-in-a-play drama called Springtime for Hitler featuring Nazi dances and songs about the conquest of Europe. Brooks Last Comedy, World History, Part I , featuring "Hitler on Ice."
Hitler has also been depicted in experimental films. Hitler: Film from Germany (1978), a 4-part experimental film, 442 minutes on Hitler, directed by Hans-JÃÆ'ürgen Syberberg, starring Heinz Schubert. A similar non-linear approach to Syberberg, likening Hitler to a film director, was also used in The Empty Mirror film (1996), directed by Barry J. Hershey, starring Norman Rodway, who speculated about Hitler's survivors of World War II, living in secret underground bunker, and is currently undergoing psychoanalysis conducted by Sigmund Freud.
Kosovar Emin Xhinovci has attracted much media attention due to his striking resemblance to Hitler, and subsequent imitation.
Hitler in fiction
WorldCat lists 553 books published under this title.
Novel
- Historical fiction novel Ron Hansen Hitler's Niece parallels Hitler's rise to power in the 1920s and 1930s with his relationship with his nephew (and his secret mistress) Geli Raubal.
- In the novel of Young Adolf (1978) by British author Beryl Bainbridge, the 23-year-old Hitler traveled to Liverpool to visit his British relative.
- The short story of 1962 Disaster and Events: The Real Story of Roald Dahl describes an unhappy husband in Austria in 1889 whose wife was about to give birth. The father is pessimistic about the child's survival because their three previous children all died in infancy. Reprimanded by doctors because of his gloom, his confidence is driven by his wife's conviction that their new baby, boy, will survive. The father named his newborn son, Adolf Hitler. In the Snow Hunting novel (2014) by British author DM Thomas, a young Hitler (going with nom de guerre 'Wolf') becomes involved with Anna Freud and his father Sigmund while in Vienna.
In Archer it is very implied that Dr. Krieger is a clone of Adolf Hitler and one of the the Boys from Brazil .
English comedian Spike Milligan appeared as Hitler on several occasions in his TV comedy series Q... .
"Mr. Hilter" ( sic ) was described by John Cleese in a Monty Python sketch while living with his friends Ron Vibbentrop (Von Ribbentrop) and Reg Bimmler (Himmler) in a boarding house in Somerset and being introduced to other guests by the landlady as they plan to reunify Taunton and Minehead.
Heil Honey I'm Home! is a controversial British sitcom of the 1950s about Hitler and Eva Braun who live in the suburbs, with neighboring Jewish neighbors. Eight episodes were produced, but only one, pilot, ever broadcast (in 1990), both by television executives and viewers who both perceived the show to be in very bad taste.
In the Australian satirical comedy show Chaser War on Everything , comedian Andrew Hansen enters Foxtel's office dressed as Adolf Hitler to complain about the abolition of David Irving's Hitler War documentary by David Irving claiming " You can not kill something because you disagree! I do it, but you can not! "
In the British BBC sci-fi comedy TV show, "Red Dwarf" meltdown "episode, the main character found a problem-modifying device that allows them to travel anywhere in outer space. They end up traveling to a planet called Wax-World (Wax-Droid theme parks that have been abandoned for millions of years, during which time droids have broken their programs and now Villain World people are fighting against the Heroes World). Two of the crew finally materialize in the World of Villain on their main command, the Third Reich. In the command room there was Hitler and his high command captured the two men. In another episode, "Timeslides", mutated mutated fluid creates photographs that the crew can pass through, Lister enters Hitler's photo and accidentally saves his life when he steals Hitler's suitcase, which contains a bomb (reference to July 20th Plot).
In Tom and Jerry's The Lonesome Mouse cartoon (1943), Jerry finds Tom's portrait and draws on it to make it look like Hitler. However, this scene is often cut from Cartoon Network sightings.
In series 1 of the British alternative comedy series Stewart Lee's Comedy Vehicle, Hitler (played by Paul Putner) appears in black & amp; a white newsreel-style recording made a speech in which he sarcastically mocked the political truth.
In the Australian comedy series Micallef Tonight , comedian Shaun Micallef, after the previous week's episode of the show was beaten in the ranks by the mini-series Hitler: The Rise of Evil the following event by dressing up as Hitler and singing the George Formby song When I Clean Windows .
In the event of [adult swimming] Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Hitler emerged as a balloon that hired Frylock to make airborne viruses to be compressed into balloons to be missed at a children's birthday party, which fights Hitler's army balloon after knowing identity. After Frylock showed Hitler that all the actors/comedians he was a Jewish fan he transferred his hatred from the Jews to the gay. Frylock appeared to him soon after that.
Hitler also appeared in the British television series Misfits, which featured superpowers, one of which is time travel. An old Jewish Holocaust victim used his power to travel back in time and kill Hitler; he failed, and Hitler found his cell phone, allowing the Nazis to overthrow the British. In the end, Kelly, the main character in the show, gained time travel power and returned to Nazi Germany to pick up a call from Hitler.
Hitler also appeared on the Australian television series The Twilight Zone
In "The Man in the Bottle," a man (Luther Adler) who has been given four wishes by the jinn wishes himself to be the unelected state leader out of office, only to find him is Hitler and that is the end of World War II. He quickly used his last wish to recover normally. In "He Live", Hitler seems to help the Neo-Nazi struggle (Dennis Hopper) gain more followers. In "No Time Like The Past," a time traveler (Dana Andrews) tried to kill Hitler in 1939 but was stopped when a suspicious helper took SS to his hotel room.
In an episode of the 2002 Twilight Zone called "Cradle of Darkness", another time traveler (Katherine Heigl) returns in time to kill Hitler as a baby while disguising himself as a new housekeeper. He kidnaps Hitler's baby and jumps off the bridge, kills himself and his baby. A horrified housekeeper, who followed him and witnessed the murder, did not tell Hitler's parents for fear of dying as a punishment, but bribed a gypsy to sell his baby. The baby was later returned to Hitler's household where he took the place to become the world-known Hitler.
More
William Saroyan wrote a short story about Hitler in his 1971 book, Letters from 74 rue Taitbout or Do not Go But If You Must Say Hello To Everybody .
Hitler appeared in a three-part episode of Justice League titled "The Savage Time," in which he was overthrown and cryogenically frozen by Savage Vandal Savage after learning how to win the war of his future. After Savage was defeated by the Justice League, Hitler was thawed and restored as a German dictator. Throughout the story, many characters (including Hitler's own subordinates) often refer to him as a tyrannical madman. In the animated series of the Monkey Code, Hitler was also frozen cryogenically (in carbonite, referring to Han Solo) and kept secret by Hitler's family, and the Gamevision crew was invited there because of the game that Dave succeeded. Dave and Black Steve inadvertently unfreeze Hitler, and they torture him by urinating him. Hitler was then killed.
In a two-part episode of Hitler's Secret Weapon in the 1970s sci-fi series of The Tomorrow People, Hitler is revealed not only alive but an alien metamorph, capable of brainwashing young people to obey his wishes. The previous season's first episode, Medusa Strain has indicated Hitler is a time traveler from the future named A.C. Pritchard.
In "The Critic" episode "Dial 'M" for Mother ", the title character of Jay Sherman is considered worse than Hitler by the test audience, who says that Jay is not" warm or cuddly ". The members of the test audience then asked whether Hitler was "in a band". Another episode, "Eyes on the Prize," featured a character named Adolph Hitmaker.
In the Doctor Who Season 6 Part 2 premiere, "Let's Kill Hitler", The Doctor was held at gunpoint and ordered to take the young River Song to kill Hitler. Ironically, the interstellar police wanted to capture Hitler for his crime when TARDIS hit his office, hit an alien and rescue him. He is grateful to the Doctor and his friends, and the Doctor bluntly tells him that it was unintentional. Rory Williams then forced Hitler to hide in the closet, much to his anger.
In the episode "The Preacher" where Hitler is one of the main characters in Hell.
In "Episode 507" of Episodes , a group of people dressed as Hitler are contestants on the game show Matt LeBlanc The Box .
In the twelfth season of Supernatural, the episode of "The One You've Been Waiting For" saw the protagonists Dean and Sam Winchester confront a group of Nazi mystics who had trapped Hitler's soul within a hour before his death, only to eliminate him after the war. The watch was finally found in 2016, but after Hitler was reborn in the body of the heretical leader, it was revealed that he had been driven insane by decades of his cage, and was shot in the head by Dean in the last confrontation.
In the TV series Perversions of Science, the episode "The Exile" involves a scientist (played by Jeffrey Combs) who was arrested for killing people in his experiments. He was sentenced to exile - on Earth, where he landed in Germany in the 1920s. The prison commander (David Warner) doubts that one person can do a lot of damage, then we learn that the exiled prisoner will become Adolf Hitler.
In episode 24 of Cyber ââTeam in Akihabara , Hitler's pictures and many other historic photos are shown during Rosenkreuz reunion with Bahnsteik Crane.
In the Portuguese TV series Hitler (played by actor Harald Rothermel) appears in episode 3, when the Nazis find out about the existence of Time Door at Convento de Cristo in Tomar, and try to use it for go to the future to change history.
Video game
In many of Hitler's video games appear, but with different meanings and roles.
At Beyond Castle Wolfenstein , the purpose of the game is to infiltrate Hitler's bunker and kill Hitler and his senior staff with a bomb, similar to the July 20 plot. Wolfenstein 3D featured Hitler as Episode 3's final boss. He fought first using a mechanical battlesuit, then took two miniguns after the suit was heavily damaged. In addition, this map shows Hitler's clones with flamethrowers that can be found before the final battle. Hitler also appeared in Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus, the sequel of Wolfenstein: The New Order. Set in an alternative 1961 in which Germany had won World War II and took over most of the world, the protagonist of B.J. Blazkowicz meets an aging and sickly Adolf Hitler with obvious signs of dementia while on a secret mission on the planet Venus.
In the game of Call of Duty: World at War, at the end of the multiplayer match that won when playing as the German Army, when the parade was played background, Hitler could also be heard saying during that <"Vor uns liegt Deutschland, in marschiert Deutschland, and hinter uns kommt Deutschland! " Translated in English as "Germany is located all around us, inside we line up Germany, and behind us Germany follow!"
The point and click of adaptation Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade show an interactive meeting between the player and Adolf Hitler. Players can ask Hitler to give him a signature in a book or free ticket, or can hit Hitler (which led to Indiana's death).
The main antagonist in the game NES Golgo 13: Top Secret Episode is Smirk, the cyborg version of Hitler. When one of his clones is shot during the final boss's battle, his head will fly towards the screen to attack the player, obviously resembling him.
In the Japanese version of the game NES Bionic Commando , the main character must fight the futuristic Nazi. The last boss of the game is Hitler, who is awakened by evil scientists. In the US version of the game, the boss name is changed to Master-D, to appease Nintendo's sensor policy, though he still resembles Hitler. In the modern remake of Bionic Commando: Rearmed , the same character appears and although it still clearly resembles Hitler, it never mentioned its name.
Hitler is the main antagonist in Operation Darkness .
Little role for Hitler was at Snoopy vs. The Hit Bar of Hitler (sidekick for Paul von Hindenburg), the game series Medal of Honor (Hitler in the opening order of the Medal of Honor: Frontline ) and in Famicom game Disk System Time Twist: Rekishi no Katasumi de... .
Alternative reality ideas taken for example in the PC video game series Command & amp; Conquer: Red Alert . Here the world-famous physicist, Albert Einstein, has traveled back in time and rambled (or "wiped out") Hitler before he rose to power. The resulting power vacuum caused the Soviet Union to attack Europe with Joseph Stalin assuming a role very similar to Hitler's. Germany then joined the Allies in battle against the Soviet Union, and the general who gave the player orders in the video sequence was German. In the PC video game War Wars: Turning Point Hitler was killed in the early days of World War II. A new chancellor reigns and under his rule, Operation Sea Lion succeeds and Nazi Germany succeeds in conquering England.
Hitler was represented, along with other World War II characters, in the PC series Hearts of Iron and in Assassins Creed 2 where he was described to have a piece of eden.
In the Assassin's Creed series, Hitler is a Templar doll who uses Piece of Eden to dominate Germany. In response, other Templars Winston Churchill, FDR, and Joseph Stalin attempted to thwart his plans. Instead of committing suicide, he was killed by Assassins.
Players can create and use "Hitler-like" Miis on Nintendo Wii in certain games like Wii Sports . However, Nintendo forbids Miis which is similar to Hitler, or Miis even named "Hitler", from playing online on Mario Kart Wii . The latest update on Xbox 360 can make players create avatars that can also resemble Hitler. So far, Microsoft has not banned anyone using Hitler's avatar.
In the game Sniper Elite V2, with the bonus bonus "Assassinate the FÃÆ'ührer", players have a chance to kill Adolf Hitler. Similar missions appear as DLC in Sniper Elite 4.
In the game The Saboteur , quotes from Hitler's speech were played over loudspeakers throughout Paris occupied by the Nazis over several cutscenes.
A conspiracy theory called In-Lakech in Persona 2: Innocent Sin claims that Hitler was smuggled out of Germany by his elite troops, Last Battalion, and moved to Antarctica. Furthermore, he uses Lance of Longinus, called the Fate of Destiny (which Adolf Hitler greatly desired), and plans to raise the Xibalba ship from under Sumaru City and raise my Bolontus, which leads ape evolution to humans and will guide human evolution to the highest creatures , "Ideal".
Comics and cartoons
In the Comics EC 'Strange Fantasy <14 Isolation , Earth is revealed to be a planetary planet where everyone with a "nasty" gen is sent and they transport their latest prisoners and speculate about its influence on the planet of the prison exactly as revealed he was Adolf Hitler.
DC Comics featured Hitler on several occasions. In Odd Adventure , in issue # 3 (December 1950-January 1951), there is a story in which Hitler was captured by space aliens before attempted suicide. Fake bodies left to be found SS. As a punishment for Hitler's crimes, he was imprisoned for life alone on a rocket ship that would travel through space until he died (a rocket ship could automatically produce his own food for him); during his waking hours, he was forced to listen to the endless loop tape of all the speeches he had made. The character known as the Unknown Soldier, who first appeared in June 1966, killed Hitler, disguised him for a short time, then pretended his death was suicide. In Adventures of the Outsiders # 33-35, Hitler's replica was made by Baron Bedlam. Planning to give the same persona clone as the original, Bedlam gave him a mentally-backed Jewish servant, several Holocaust films, and a pistol, Bedlam's intention was to clone to embrace Nazism and ultimately kill the servant to "prove himself" as Hitler. Instead, the clone - aware of its relationship to the cruelty it sees - commits suicide. In the footsteps of DC Comics' Elseworlds, Golden Age , Hitler's brain was successfully transplanted into the Dyna-Mite brain pan. Now pretending to be a superhero called Dynaman, he plans to revive the Nazi ideals with the help of Ultra-Humanite. He possessed a magical object, the Spear of Destiny, which gave him control over the superpower that entered the Nazi territory, explaining why the Justice Society of America did not enter Berlin and end the war. In Fawcett Pre- Crisis comics he is a member of the Monster Society of Evil with Benito Mussolini and Hideki Tojo, and other Nazis such as (List of enemies Captain Marvel (DC Comics)) Herr Phoul is another member of Society. He is proven to have helped in the creation of the super-powerful supervillain Arayn the Nazi Captain. In the Justice League episode The Savage Time, Hitler made an unnamed cameo. He was shown cryogenically frozen by Vandal Savage, who succeeded him as Fuhrer, not only from Germany but the whole world. He never mentioned his name, but his character identity is not wrong anymore.
In Erik Larsen's comic book The Savage Dragon (published by Image Comics), it was revealed that Hitler did not die in 1945 but after the war against Hellboy in Romania in 1952. His body was destroyed, the brain transplanted to the body big gorillas. Suffering from amnesia and calling himself Brainiape, the chimera had great panther strength and joined the Chicago, IL criminal organization known as the Vicious Circle, eventually becoming its leader. He remembered his past only in 1996 when he met Hellboy again, alongside enemy Vicious Circle, a talented cop called the Dragon. The ape's body was killed, and it was revealed that Hitler's brain had mutated and could live without assistance by the technology or the host body, walking on small feet.
Criminals Marvel Comics Hate-Monger was revealed to be Hitler's consciousness transferred to the body of cloning by Nazi scientist Arnim Zola. The original Hitler, rather than suicide, was confronted by Human Torch and his partner, Toro, after Eva Braun committed suicide. The two heroes made Hitler bright when he tried to blow up a bomb. When he died, he ordered one of his loyal followers nearby to tell the world that he had committed suicide. The clone was killed in the Fantastic Four when the Visible Girl made her hit her own army with her hate ray, causing them to shoot her for bringing them into battle with the Fantastic Four. At the time of his death he plans to start a war using rays that cause hatred and that only he has the antidote, which begins with the South American country. He also taught the idea of ââbigotry also in America. In another story, Hitler is seen in the Hell realm of the Mephisto devil.
In Weird War Tales # 58 (1977) The "death of a dictator" Hitler kills a man who rattled in rags before going to death in the history of confidence will repeat and he will be able to rebuild all three Germany. The story ends with our Hitler with long hair being killed in exactly the same way as the ragged person in the tattered robe. The last panel reveals that the scientist is too true in history will be repeated when our Hitler's killer looks exactly as he did at first and he will go to his deferred death room and these events will repeat... forever.
From Hell by Alan Moore describes Klara Hitler having a vision of the Holocaust during Adolf's conception.
In the Spanish comic series Hitler (1978), published in Spain by Mercocomic and in France by Elvifrance, Hitler faked his death by double, escaped Germany with Martin Bormann (both disguised as Russian soldiers), then suffered amnesia and, of all things, became a KGB agent with a mission to hunt down the Nazis. Later in the story, he rediscovered his memory and ended up in a mentally disturbed mental hospital.
A popular British strip comic by Pat Mills published in Battle Picture Weekly 1979-1985 and describes the experience of young British soldier Charley Bourne in the Great War trenches. This strip includes an episode sequence in which the heroine story of Charley and his unit is placed opposite Lance's young Corporal Adolf Hitler regiment in December 1917. Charley and Hitler fight hand-to-hand in one scene, almost killing each other. Hitler is described as a rather eccentric and shabby, angry but brave army, albeit selfishly.
Hitler's New Adventure by Grant Morrison and Steve Yeowell dealt with the idea that Hitler remained in Liverpool, based on rumors that he was visiting family members such as William Patrick Hitler.
Other examples of Hitler in the comic include the Osamu Tezuka manga Adolf (Hitler is one of three men named Adolf around which the story revolves), the Mexican comic book series FantÃÆ'Ã'mas (at where the multi-part storyline entitled "Hitler's Child" had Hitler's son and Eva Braun resurrecting the Fourth Reich who conquered France) and Spriggan (Neo-Nazi used Hitler's clone in order to gain access to ancient hidden treasure trove somewhere in Europe using the Holy Grail to get his soul into cloning and leading the remnants of the Neo-Nazi to its location).
Hitler was mentioned in the Hellsing created the Millennium group. Also at Drifters , he founded the Ortega Empire.
Warner Bros. produces wartime cartoons that are constantly parodying Hitler and his personality traits. Most (if not all) cartoons with Hitler and the Nazis as antagonists end up with American hero cartoon characters (like Bugs Bunny or Daffy Duck) making a mockery of Hitler and his people.
Hitler in music
Many songs tell the story of Hitler one way or another, for example "Gotterdammerung" by Stratovarius directly mention the history of Hitler and the Nazi regime. Bowie has also been quoted as saying "Hitler was the first rock star" and, at one time, wanted to direct a movie based on the life of Heinrich Himmler. "Heads We Dancing" by Kate Bush tells the story of a woman who danced the night away with a charming stranger, only to find out the next morning that she was Adolf Hitler. Metal band Texas Groove, Pantera, wrote and recorded a song called "Demons Be Driven". It tells the story of how Hitler was plagued by paranoia and began to hate Jews and religion. The debut single of the Australian band TISM is "Stool on My Face", which is about coprophilia Adolf Hitler. Australian comedy entourage Doug Anthony Allstars has a song called "Hitler Mexico", which tells the story of how Hitler looks if he was born Mexican. It made an appearance on their television show, DAAS Kapital . The song "Hitler as Kalki" by the apocalyptic folk band Arus 93 utilizes Savitri Devi's idea that Hitler is an avatar of the Hindu god Kalki. "Two Little Hitler" by Elvis Costello, superficially a song about a loveless couple but was reportedly a real-life reflection of the relationship between singer and producer Nick Lowe (who had previously recorded a song called "Little Hitler", a similarity that led to speculation about the origin later on) on the album Armed Forces â ⬠. Antony and Johnsons have released the song "Hitler in My Heart" on their debut where the term "Hitler" is generally used as a metaphor for the bad inside - as well as in the song "Crack Hitler" by Faith No More from Angel Dust.
Other songs take a more serious approach and deal with Hitler's impact on the world. Thrash metal group Flotsam and Jetsam recorded the song "Der Fuhrer" for their album Doomsday for the Deceiver . This song discusses the destruction caused by Hitler in Europe. The New York Anthrax metal band recorded the song "The Enemy" for their album Spreading the Disease . The song discusses Hitler's role in the Holocaust.
There are some examples of parody involving Hitler. Bing Crosby and Sister Andrew referenced Hitler in the song, Hot Time in Berlin City. "Der Fuehrer's Face" is an elaborate parody of Nazism created by comedian Spike Jones. This is one of his most famous songs. A new rap song titled "To Be or Not to Be (The Hitler Rap)" performed by Mel Brooks is on the movie To Be or Not to Be's soundtrack album, but it's not in the movie itself.. By typing Hitler Rap to YouTube, one can see a popular music video, YouTube favorites. Mel Brooks dressed up like Hitler singing from behind the desk while a male dancer in black trousers, armor and a black SS hat and a female dancer in a mesh stocking danced wildly with each other around Hitler on a huge dance floor with a dam design.
List of songs about Adolf Hitler
- "Mr. Hitler" by Lead Belly
- "Hot Time in Berlin City" by Bing Crosby and Andrew Sisters
- "Defecate on My Face", by TISM
- "Even Hitler Has a Girlfriend" by Mr. T Experience
- "Der Fuehrer's face" by Spike Jones
- "Heads Were Dancing" by Kate Bush
- Hitler Only Have One Ball - British War II troop marching song
- "Spring for Hitler" from Mel Brooks's movie and Play The Producers
- "You think you're kidding, Mr. Hitler?", the theme song from Dad's Army by Jimmy Perry and Derek Taverner
Internet
The clips parodied from the 2004 film Downfall have mushroomed internationally through YouTube and other video sites. Parody replaces the subtitle of the original movie with the wrong subtitle. The most commonly used clip is the scene where Hitler received the news of the Red Army which advanced far beyond the number of troops commanded by Felix Steiner. Those subtitles with references to Hitler became angry over various aspects of modern pop culture such as politics, online games, movies, television, music, sports and many other local or international events.
This phenomenon began in English but has spread to other languages ââincluding Japanese (a large number of videos on Nico Nico Douga on various topics), Chinese (influenced by Japanese, commentary on the Wenzhou railway train and many other sensational topics especially on Tudou and Youku) , Bulgaria (to mock Bulgarian President Georgi Parvanov for being State security agent during communist dictatorship and to become a hunter), Romania (for the 2009 presidential election), Croatia (comments on government affairs), Serbia (on poor results by the football team FK Red Star), France (on the weather), Spain (on various topics mainly related to local events Argentina and Chile), Indonesia (mainly on local politics, presidential election, culture, and everyday life), and Hebrew (about the difficulty of finding parking in Tel Aviv).
Trailers and/or characters from other movies, starting from other Hitler depictions such as Inglourious Basterds or Hitler: The Last Ten Days , or even movies that have little or nothing to do with < i> Downfall , also paired for funny effects. Trends involving the use of computer-generated imagery or special effects, such as superimposing Hitler's head on various videos, are also beginning to become popular.
On April 21, 2010, Constantin Film, the production and distribution company in charge of the film, began the massive elimination of parody videos on YouTube. This abolition was criticized by supporters of digital rights and was followed by the emergence of a self-reference parody video on the subject of Constantine's actions in connection with the parody.
Visible Cat Websites As Hitler displays pictures of cats that resemble German leaders.
Godwin's law states "As the online discussion gets longer, the chances of a comparison involving the Nazis or Hitler approach one". From this an additional formulation is derived, also found online, stating "The first person to mention the Third Reich automatically loses argument".
In 2010, Hitler has been described by EpicLLOYD in the second episode of the Epic Rap Battles of History series, "Darth Vader vs. Hitler", where he faces Darth Vader (played by Nice Peter's co-creator) in rap battle. This episode became the most popular episode series and successfully led to the popularity of the creators of the Nice series Peter and EpicLLOYD. In 2011, in the first episode of Season 2, "Hitler vs. Vader 2", EpicLLOYD and Nice Peter took their part in the second rap battle between Darth Vader and Hitler and again to start the third season, in the episode "Hitler vs Vader 3" which was uploaded on October 7, 2013 on the YouTube channel series.
Art
Salvador DalÃÆ' painted some pictures involving Hitler. The Enigma of Hitler (1939) depicts Hitler's torn photo on a plate in a normally surreal landscape that hangs damaged phones and umbrellas. He also painted Hitler's Metamorphosis of Faces into the Landscape of the Moon Light (1958). One of his latest works is Hitler Masturbating (1973), which illustrates it, with Hitler seen from behind in an armchair in the middle of a snow-capped, remote landscape.
Hitler is depicted in a balloon facing the ranks, armed forces in the Vision of War paint by Indian artist A. Ramachandran. His photograph with Gandhi by M. F. Husain is still controversial with Hindutva groups in India.
In India
The name "Hitler" is widely used for anyone who is too authoritarian in manner, but does not have the same negative connotations as in the West. For example, in the 1998 film Hitler, a disciplinary hero dubbed Hitler was just someone with strong traditional values. There are at least three other Indian films entitled "Hitler", in which the character of Hitler is a hero (Hitler (film 1996), Hitler (film 1997), Hitler Umanath). Hitler Didi (My Sister Hitler) is a TV show about a character with a dominant sister.
Hitler is also used as a personal name in India, as in the case of politician Adolf Lu Hitler Marak. The Hero Hitler in Love movie is about a man named "Hitler" who tries to love everyone. Furthermore, the swastika has for centuries become a common symbol in India with positive connotations. According to The Indian Republic ,
A newer cinematic film-Gandhi to Hitler (2011) is reproached for painting him as a lost hero of India's struggle for Independence while Hitler's memorabilia, including his autobiography Mein Kampf, continues to grow in sales. In 2006, a Mumbai restaurant was forced to change its name from the painful "Hit Hitler", while in 2012, a clothing store named "Hitler" in Ahemdabad invited considerable rage (saying that the shop owner named unfortunately said that he had choosing a name to commemorate his grandfather, a strict disciplinarian called the family as "Hitler").
According to Navras Jaat Aafreedi, such references to Hitler are usually unrelated to pro-Nazi sympathies, but some Hindu nationalist groups see Hitler's swastika as a "great service to Hinduism" and link anti-Semitic ideology with anti-Islamism.
The "Hitler" clothing store in Ahmedabad in Gujarat opened in mid-August 2012. The store soon became controversial on its behalf. The logo of the store even has a swastika embedded in the dot above "i" in the name of Hitler. The owner, Rajesh Shah, told the media that he did not expect all the commotion. He had chosen the name because his business partner's grandfather was dubbed "Hitler" because of his stern attitude. He added to the media that he also did not know about Hitler's killing of millions until after the store's opening. He declared he had no intention of changing his name unless someone else paid the fee. Among the groups that objected to the store's name was the small Jewish community in Ahmedabad. A diplomat at the Israeli embassy in New Delhi said the embassy would protest in "the strongest possible terms" for the Indian government. The Israeli consul general in Mumbai asked state officials to ensure that his shop was renamed, but commented that he believed the most likely use of the name was a product of ignorance rather than antisemitism. Reports indicate that the shopkeeper has agreed to rename the store after an offer by a Jewish organization to pay the fee. In October 2012 the Ahmedabad City government allegedly removed a store sign without proper procedures. It was renamed Gladiator .
Cross Cafe in Mumbai was formerly a Hitler Cross cafe. The business is trying to attract attention by using Hitler's theme, and is decorated with Nazi images. Actor Murli Sharma attended the opening party; when asked what he thinks of the name, he says "I'm not really nervous because I have not read much about him yet, but from what I know about Hitler, I find this name rather funny." Suggested alternative names include Stalin Samosa Shop, Falafels Ayatollah Khomeini and Juicy Juice Kim Jong.
Note
References
- Faschismus in der populÃÆ'ären Culture [Fascism in popular culture] by Georg Seesslen Berlin: Edition of Tiamat, 1994-1996. ISBN 3-923118-24-4, OCLC: 80476144
- The world Hitler never created: the alternative history and memory of Nazism by Gavriel David Rosenfeld. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005. ISBNÃ, 0-521-84706-0 OCLC: 58052431
- The image of Hitler and the German youth by Erik H Erikson; Berkeley, California: Institute of Child Welfare, University of California, 1940-1950? OCLC: 26533155
Further reading
- Butter, Michael. The Epitome of Evil: Hitler in American Fiction, 1939-2002 . Palgrave Macmillan, April 28, 2009. ISBN: 0230620809, 9780230620803.
External links
- Lampooning Hitler - a slideshow by Life magazine
- Video - "Hitler Rap" - Music Video 1984 with Mel Brooks as Hitler - S & amp; M/Leather/Fetish Dance Routine: on YouTube
Source of the article : Wikipedia