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Stukas

  • 1941
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
199
YOUR RATING
Carl Raddatz and Alfred Otto Boettcher in Stukas (1941)
DramaWar

This German propaganda film details the exploits of a group of Luftwaffe pilots flying Junkers Ju 87 "Stukas"--dive bombers--in the Battle of France in the early days of World War II.This German propaganda film details the exploits of a group of Luftwaffe pilots flying Junkers Ju 87 "Stukas"--dive bombers--in the Battle of France in the early days of World War II.This German propaganda film details the exploits of a group of Luftwaffe pilots flying Junkers Ju 87 "Stukas"--dive bombers--in the Battle of France in the early days of World War II.

  • Director
    • Karl Ritter
  • Writers
    • Felix Lützkendorf
    • Karl Ritter
  • Stars
    • Carl Raddatz
    • Hannes Stelzer
    • Ernst von Klipstein
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    199
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Karl Ritter
    • Writers
      • Felix Lützkendorf
      • Karl Ritter
    • Stars
      • Carl Raddatz
      • Hannes Stelzer
      • Ernst von Klipstein
    • 6User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos3

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    Top cast30

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    Carl Raddatz
    Carl Raddatz
    • Hauptmann Heinz Bork
    Hannes Stelzer
    Hannes Stelzer
    • Oberleutnant Hans Wilde
    Ernst von Klipstein
    • Oberleutnant "Patzer" von Bomberg
    Albert Hehn
    Albert Hehn
    • Oberleutnant Hesse
    Herbert Wilk
    • Oberleutnant Günter Schwarz
    O.E. Hasse
    O.E. Hasse
    • Oberarzt Dr. Gregorius
    Karl John
    Karl John
    • Oberleutnant Lothar Loos
    Else Knott
    Else Knott
    • Krankenschwester Ursula
    Marina von Ditmar
    Marina von Ditmar
    • Junge Französin
    Egon Müller-Franken
    • Oberleutnant Jordan
    Günther Markert
    • Oberleutnant Hellmers
    Josef Dahmen
    Josef Dahmen
    • Feldwebel Traugott
    Erich Stelmecke
    • Feldwebel Rochus
    Georg Thomalla
    Georg Thomalla
    • Unteroffizier Matz
    Heinz Wemper
    • Oberwerkmeister Heinze
    Lutz Götz
    • Stabsfeldwebel Niederegger
    Beppo Brem
    Beppo Brem
    • Oberfeldwebel Putzenlechner
    Fritz Wagner
    Fritz Wagner
    • Feldwebel Franz
    • Director
      • Karl Ritter
    • Writers
      • Felix Lützkendorf
      • Karl Ritter
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews6

    5.3199
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    Featured reviews

    5boblipton

    Good Times

    How jolly to be in the Luftwaffe! You can curse and eat wild boar and listen to player pianos, and if you get deployed five times a day, you blow the bejazus - or whatever the German equivalent is - and fly back to base. If you crash your plane, one of the others will pick you up.

    This is the first wartime flying movie I've seen in which everyone has a grand time, even the pilots who are captured by the French. In between blowing up ship, tanks, and random Frenchies, it's all fine fun. Every other example of the genre had the men operating under stress, with lots of drinking and everyone near to cracking: American, British, even Japanese war flying films shows that the men in the air and those who send them up there take things seriously.
    gvb0907

    To Fly and Die for Germany

    In his diary entry for June 2, 1941, German Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels recorded his opinion of "Stukas" after attending a preview:

    "New Ritter film, 'Stukas.' Quite good, with some wonderful air footage, but a typical Ritter production. He cannot lead people. Rather too noisy."

    The American perspective was decidedly more negative. The broadcast journalist Howard K. Smith offered this scathing description in "Last Train From Berlin:"

    "It was a monotonous film about a bunch of obstreperous adolescents who dived bombed things and people. The bombed anything and anybody. That's all the film was - just one bombing after another. Finally the hero got bored with bombing and lost interest in life - so they took him off to the Bayreuth music festival where he listened to a few lines of Wagner's music; his soul began to breathe again, he got visions of the Fuhrer and of guns blazing away, so he impolitely left right in the middle of the first act and dashed back and started bombing things again with the old gusto."

    Smith was understandably horrified, but 60 years later the real horror is not in the films depiction of bombing, but in its death-worshiping dialogue.

    "Stukas" is the story of a dive bomber squadron during the Battle of France in May-June 1940. The primary characters are the commander, played by Carl Raddatz, who here and in "Wunschkonzert" is the epitome of a Luftwaffe officer, and the flight surgeon, played by O.E. Hasse, best known as the confessed killer in Hitchcock's "I Confess." The pilot Smith described as "bored" is played by Hannes Stelzer, who ironically was killed later in the war.

    Although the action focuses on dive bombing, the real theme of the film is the willingness, indeed the necessity, to risk death in the service of Germany. In the moral universe of "Stukas", there is no finer death in the world. Hauptmann Bork (Raddatz) salutes the fallen: "Yes, one does not think about their death, but instead about what they have died for, and remembers them like the young gods that they are." Deeply moved, Doctor Gregorius (Hasse) recites lines from a poem titled ""Death for the Fatherland." The verse reads in part:

    "O take me, let me join that circle, so that I will not die a common death! I do not want to die in vain; but I would love to perish on a hill of sacrifice"

    "for the Fatherland, to bleed the blood of my heart, for the Fatherland - and soon it is done! To you, dear ones! I come , to join those who taught me to live and to die!"

    This ode to death must rank as one of the most chilling speeches in any film, especially given the nature of the cause that it honors.

    For further insights into "Stukas" and other films of the period, I highly recommend Jay W. Baird's "To Die for Germany" from which the above quotations were drawn. This is perhaps the best book ever written on Nazi aesthetics and their integral cult of death.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      In the early 194Os every Latin American country except Argentina banned the import of German films, nonetheless even that country prevented a print of this title from being smuggled in on a ship from Portugal.
    • Connections
      Edited into Deutschland, erwache! (1968)
    • Soundtracks
      Stukalied
      (Wir sind die schwarzen Husaren der Luft)

      Words by Geno Ohlischläger (as Geno Ohlischlaeger)

      Music by Herbert Windt

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 27, 1941 (Germany)
    • Country of origin
      • Germany
    • Language
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Kyûkôka bakugeki tai
    • Filming locations
      • Berlin, Germany
    • Production company
      • Universum Film (UFA)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 41m(101 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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