Nazis in fiction
During and after the Second World War, Nazism became a key driving force behind Allied propaganda, as well as the development of the superhero during the Golden Age of comics. Ideas that the Third Reich could have possibly implemented have helped to fuel various films, books and comics from 1939 to the present day. In almost all fictional use of Nazis, both during and after the war years, the Nazis are portrayed as cold-hearted, ruthless and evil. They are often stereotypically portrayed as wearing monocles and black uniforms.
Films and cartoons
Various propaganda films used the Nazis as a way to encourage patriotism and national pride, as well as a means to recruit soldiers into the Allied forces.
The British cinema were the main people to create such films before the American entry into the war following Pearl Harbor. The British comedian Will Hay created various films that ranged from Nazi spies being smuggled into mainland Britain via the Isle of Skye, to scientists working on gas-bombs.
American cinema at first used the Nazis only to show the stubbornness of the Reich, such as the 1940s film, Casablanca. American propaganda concentrated largely on the Japanese involvement in the war, with the Nazis as a backup.
The Looney Tunes and Walt Disney Studios used the Nazis as a ploy for their comic characters. However, Disney seemed to concentrate more on the German people within the Nazi Regime, as shown in their 1943 film, Der Fuehrers' Face, starring Donald Duck. Warner Brothers produced a series of propaganda cartoons named Private Snafu to train recruits on what not to do if they were in a situation similar to those in the cartoons.
Existing examples of films including fictitious Nazis include:
- The Eagle Has Landed - The rescue of Benito Mussolini in 1943 leads to Oberst (Colonel) Steiner leading a paratrooper division to assassinate Winston Churchill
- The Producers - Features the musical, Springtime for Hitler
- Daffy - The Commando - A famous Daffy Duck propaganda cartoon
- Der Fuehrer's Face - A Donald Duck cartoon that showed civilian life in Nazi Germany
- The Goose Steps Out - A Will Hay film made in 1942
- The Indiana Jones franchise
- Inglourious Basterds
- Captain America
- Hellboy
Comics
The comic-book industry were able to boost their sales because of their help in the war effort meant that they were spared from paper recycling. Superheroes in particular, like Captain America were pictured as fighting the Nazis, both real and fictitious, in large battles. The better remembered version is of Captain America fighting Adolf Hitler himself. In Fawcett Comics the character Captain Marvel fought against the Monster Society of Evil, which included Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini, and Hideki Tojo, along with Captain Nazi and Herr Phoul, a stereotypical Nazi officer. Captain Nazi was a superstrong perfect Nazi who was a major enemy of Captain Marvel Jr.. Hitler was shown in the hellish realm of the demon Mephisto in a Thor comic, and in a story where the demon Sattanish resurrects and empowers four historical murderors to form a Lethal Legion, one of them is Heinrich Himmler, who is given the power to belch gas fumes from his mouth.
The British comics tended to portray the Nazis as clumsy and foolish due the cartoon-style of the comics available at that time, as shown in characters like Desperate Dan and Lord Snooty.
The retro-comic-book company, Big Bang Comics, have recreated a lot of Golden Age comics using Nazi characters for villains, ranging from Nazi spies to saboteurs. The All-Star Squadron of DC Comics was another retro-comic produced in the style of World War II propaganda comics. A tactic also used in the Amalgam Comics run with Super Soldier.
By the beginning of the Silver Age of Comics in the 1960s, the focus of the Nazi threat turned to the threat of Communism with the rise of the Cold War. In the Flashpoint event Nazis are occupying Brazil.
Books
Various books written during wartime were few and far-between, partially from National Service that called up a large amount of volunteers, and the other from paper rationing. Outside of comics, only a few books were ever written for propaganda purposes. Those that were tended to work along the lines of the comic books.
List of fictitious Nazis
- Arnold Toht - a psychotic Gestapo agent in Raiders of the Lost Ark
- Oberst Kurt Steiner - played by Michael Caine in The Eagle Has Landed
- Oberst Wilhelm Klink - played by Werner Klemperer on Hogan's Heroes
- Red Skull - A Marvel Comics character
- Kroenen - Hellboy's enemy
- Ultra-Metallo - A Nazi super-robot from Amalgam Comics
- Rudolph Müller - A Will Hay character, a spy
- Green Skull - Another Amalgam Comics character
- Baron Zemo - A Nazi aristocrat in Marvel Comics who after the war escaped to South America.
- Von Vulture - An anthropomorphic vulture who appeared alongside Daffy Duck
- Ingrid Weiss - A Neo-Nazi who fought Tom Strong
- Super Stormtrooper - A Big Bang Comics character, a Waffen-SS soldier
- Hitler Youth - Another Big Bang Comics character
- Oberst Max Radl - Appears in The Eagle Has Landed, organized the supposed kidnapping of Winston Churchill
- Franz Leibkind - A Neo-Nazi who wrote Springtime for Hitler
- Heinrich von Gitfinger - A Neo-Nazi featured in Captain Kremmen
- Captain Nazi - A DC Comics villain
- Baron Blitzkrieg - Foe of the All-Star Squadron.
- Hauptmann Englande - An alternate Captain Britain from a world where the Nazis won World War II.
- The Z-34 - An excavator/submarine machine featured in Big Bang Comics
- Zwerg - Assistant to Baron Blitzkrieg
- Standartenführer Hans Landa - SS officer tasked with hunting Jews in Occupied France. Played by Christoph Waltz in Inglourious Basterds
- General von Talon - A Nazi falcon played by Tim Curry in the 2005 film, Valiant
- Herr Otto Flick, a Gestapo officer in 'Allo 'Allo!
- Alfred Hoffman in the Fringe episode "The Bishop Revival"
- Various characters in Iron Sky
- Arthur Arden - A convicted Nazi war criminal in American Horror Story
- The Major from Hellsing
- Rudol von Stroheim from Jojo's Bizarre Adventure
- Kurt Dussander, commandant of Patin, a fictional concentration camp. Fugitive Nazi war criminal living under the alias "Arthur Denker" in California. Dussander is one of two main characters in Stephen King's novella Apt Pupil, under the section Summer of Corruption, part of the collection Different Seasons.