Der Fuehrer's Face

1943 "The picture from which the song sensation was taken!"
7.5| 0h8m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 01 January 1943 Released
Producted By: Walt Disney Productions
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

A marching band of Germans, Italians, and Japanese march through the streets of swastika-motif Nutziland, serenading "Der Fuehrer's Face." Donald Duck, not living in the region by choice, struggles to make do with disgusting Nazi food rations and then with his day of toil at a Nazi artillery factory. After a nervous breakdown, Donald awakens to find that his experience was in fact a nightmare.

Watch Online

Der Fuehrer's Face (1943) is currently not available on any services.

Director

Jack Kinney

Production Companies

Walt Disney Productions

AD
AD

Watch Free for 30 Days

All Prime Video Movies and TV Shows. Cancel anytime.
Watch Now
Der Fuehrer's Face Videos and Images

Der Fuehrer's Face Audience Reviews

TrueJoshNight Truly Dreadful Film
FeistyUpper If you don't like this, we can't be friends.
Cooktopi The acting in this movie is really good.
Marva It is an exhilarating, distressing, funny and profound film, with one of the more memorable film scores in years,
ironhorse_iv In hindsight, the whole idea of Donald Duck (voiced by Clarence Nash) being in Nazi Germany, working in a war munitions factory is uncomfortable, because of the dark and trouble history of WW2, even if it's in a nightmare settling. Still, this animation War propaganda short film by Walt Disney Productions and released in 1943 by RKO Radio Picture is laugh out loud funny. I think a lot of modern viewers, mistaken this film, as anti-Semitic, because there has been long rumored that Disney secretly supported the Nazis. I really doubt that, because this short film was obviously made to mock the Nazis, and support the United States in selling War Bonds. I know, Disney welcomed German filmmaker and Nazi propagandist Leni Riefenstahl to Hollywood to promote her documentary film 1938's Olympia, but it's been say that Disney disavowed her political view, claiming that he only champion, her filmmaking styles, when he did invite her. In my opinion, Walt Disney wasn't a racist or had anti-Semitism beliefs, publicly or privately. Yes, he might had made disparaging remarks about blacks or asserted white superiority, but like other white Americans of his generation, he was racially and religionist insensitive. It shows in his early cartoons that he was very insensitive, with ethnic stereotypes. A good example is 1933's Three Little Pigs in which the Big Bad Wolf comes to the door dressed as a Jewish peddler and 1929's The Opry House in which Mickey Mouse is dressed and dances as a Hasidic Jew. Still, none of them, were really that offensive. Even so, Der Fuhrer's face didn't have any Jewish stereotypes to speak off. Nor does it portray, any of the Nazis crime against the Jews. While, most Americans have heard about 1939's Kristallnacht riots against Jewish businesses. A lot of them, like Disney couldn't figure out, how bad the cruelties against the Jews, was, until, much, much later. It wasn't until after the movie release, that word, started to leak out, about Nazis concentration camps. Still, it wasn't until, the camps were liberation, that Americans and European were truly expose to the sights, sounds, and stenches of horrible beyond belief. It was cruelties so enormous as to be incomprehensible to the normal mind. This movie had no mention of the anti-Semitism views of the Nazis. So, for some critics to call it, anti-Semitism, is an understatement. Instead, the movie tackles another thing that Nazis love to do and that's being a police-state style of government. It mocks how Nazi Germany supposedly how it treats its civilians by over-working them and feeding them, poorly. It's true, that the average German, worked 43 hours a week in 1933, and by 1939 this increased to 47 hours a week, but it's not 48 hours, a day, like the cartoon is saying. Surprising, even the United States in 1943, most standard for full-time work in many industries was a 40- or 48-hour week. It was really no-differs. The same with food. During the middle of WW2, most of the German people were still, eating well. It wasn't until 1944, that things went really sour for them and most went hungry. One thing that the movie got right was badly manage, the Nazi's Strength through Joy program was. It kinda collapsed on itself by 1939 and by 1943, many German were not able to take that much of vacations, but it's also worth noting, that Americans at the time, had no such government vacation program and many pro-Union benefits was downsized. In many ways, working in United States during WW2 was just as tough, as working in Nazis Germany. The main different was Americans workers have more freedom to spend their money than the Germans. Anyways, the movie does go over the top, a bit on portraying Germany as Nazi-land with everything was shape like a swastika, but it never goes on the attack on the German people. You don't see, much insulting German stereotypes, just the insane Nazi culture. The cartoon is more offensive with the incredibly racist caricature of the then-Japanese Emperor, Hirohito. This was standard in wartime cartoons, of course, and Warner Brothers was doing far nastier stuff at the time with both countries. I really surprise, how tame, it was, as a propaganda video. It could had, went, much worst. Anyways, the animation is pretty good. I love the song, "Der Fuehrer's Face". It was pretty catchy. Spike Jones & Oliver Wallace did a good job. Originally called "Donald Duck in Nutzi Land," it was retitled when the theme song became a hit. The film won the 1943 Academy Award for Animated Short Film, and was the only Donald Duck cartoon to win an Oscar. However, because of the propagandistic nature of the short, and the depiction of Donald Duck as a Nazi. Disney kept the film out of general circulation after its original release. Its first home video release came in 2004 with the release of the third wave of the Walt Disney Treasures DVD sets. In an attempt to nip misunderstandings, The Disney Wartime Cartoon DVD features non-skippable, non-fast-forwardable commentaries by Jewish film critic, Leonard Maltin, who explains the satirical nature of the cartoon. The BBC did banned the song for a while, because oddly they considered raspberry blowing obscene. The solution was replace it, with kazoo sounds. The song did help influences importation scenes from 1953's Stalag 17 & 2002's Hart's War. The movie continue to influence, many animators as well. A lot of them, went on, to do, many political cartoons. Overall: This film directed by Jack Kinney and written by Joe Grant and Dick Huemer was pretty good. So go see it, and don't forget to throw a tomato at Hitler's face or maybe you shouldn't do that to your TV. Just check it out.
marcus_stokes2000 *The SPOILERS' Face* The short begins with a Nazi band - with Hirohito, Mussolini (who wittily states 'We would leave if we could'), an enormous Nazi, a very tall and lanky Nazi and a very effeminate Nazi singing the title song, which basically makes fun of Hitler.Cut to Donald Duck, who lives in a minuscule house in this 'Nutziland' where EVERYTHING either is Swastika-shaped or refers to Hitler (including clouds and picket fences). Also his house is decorated in the 'Hitler style' (the Hitler-cuckoo is a hoot!).After having gotten dressed in paper clothes and hat, Donald manages to eat a slice of bread so hard it requires a saw to cut, drink coffee made from one single bean and spray 'Aroma of Bacon and Eggs' down his throat, before the Nazi band makes him read the Mein Kampf - to 'improve his mind' - before coming to get him to work.Donald is a 'willing worker of Nutziland' who has to work 48 hours a day for the Fuehrer making shells, and having to salute Hitler's image at the same time.He gets a 'vacation mit pay' working out obsessively in front of an image of the Alps. The poor guy gets bombarded with Nazi propaganda, and ends up being 'chosen' by special degree of the Fuehrer to work overtime.Eventually, he goes insane and hallucinates various things, among whom switching places with the shells, the Nazi orchestra made of shells, and even himself as Hitler, being saluted by a shell, as the song 'The Fuehrer's Face' keeps on being played faster and faster, until...Donald wakes up from the Nazi nightmare and realizes he is safe in America.Awesome, awesome short where Disney openly makes fun of Hitler's insanity. An Academy Award-winner classic not to miss! The Fuehrer's Face: 9/10.
Quaker404 The comment contains spoilers. Be warned.As we all know, back during the days of World War 2 media was used to promote the state and discredit the enemy. This cartoon clearly was made for this purpose.It starts with a Nazi (Or Nutzi as they are called in this short) marching band singing how they 'Heil in Der Fuehrer's Face'. Then we find Donald Duck, a citizen of the Nutzi state. After being rudely woken up by the band he a forces out a 'Heil Hitler'. After a breakfast consisting of a slice of stale bread, we (the audience) find that Donald does not enjoy life as a Nutzi.Donald begins his job, screwing on the heads of shells. He is told be his superiors that they expect '48 hours a day' of work from their citizens. With only a few seconds of vacation and a compulsion to salute photos of Hitler under pain of death, it is not long before Donald starts to descend to madness. The Nutzi state is taking its toll. It is then we find it has been a dream all this time and that Donald is in fact a proud citizen of the USA.Clearly the message given in this animated short is that the Nazis are cruel to even their own.Overall is is an interesting piece of film and worth watching if you can find it.
Shawn Watson It's easy to see why Disney has kept this hidden since 1942. It may have won Academy Award for Best Animated Short Subject but this isn't something I would want to be associated with.Donald Duck has a dream he is living under a Nazi regime and his life is a joyless, oppressed existence. He is forced to hail Hitler every couple of seconds whether he means it or not and the unseen Nazis never have a bayonet more than an inch away from his face. The message is rather unsubtle as Donald wakes up to the site of his Statue of Liberty model. 'Thank God I live in the United States of America' he says. What's dangerous about this cartoon is that there is never a certain face given to the enemy. It gives the impression that anyone of a different skin color/ethnic origin was to be regarded with suspicion and fear. Not exactly the kind of attitude you want to promote to today's youngsters. Probably why it's been locked up for so long.