Hans Steinhoff
Hans Steinhoff (10 March 1882, Marienberg – 20 April 1945) was a German film director, best known for the propaganda films he made in the Nazi era. Steinhoff started his career as a stage actor in the 1900s and later worked as a stage director. He directed his first silent film Clothes Make the Man, the adaption of a novel by Gottfried Keller, in 1921. Steinhoff was a convinced Nazi and directed many propaganda films, he sometimes even wore his Nazi party membership button on the film set. His most notable films were perhaps Hitlerjunge Quex (1933), an influential propaganda film for the Hitler Youth, and Ohm Krüger (1940), for which he won the Mussolini Cup at the 1941 Venice Film Festival. On April 20, 1945, during the last war days, Steinhoff tried to escape from Berlin on the last flight to Madrid. The plane was shot down by the Soviet Red Army and all passengers died.
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Crew
Movie
Hitler Youth Quex
Director
1933
Movie
Uncle Krüger
Director
1941
Movie
Fear
Director
1928
Movie
Tanz auf dem Vulkan
Director
1938
Movie
Rembrandt
Director
1942
Movie
Die Geierwally
Director
1940
Movie
Robert Koch, der Bekämpfer des Todes
Director
1939
Gestern und heute
Director
1938
Movie
An Enemy of the People
Director
1937
Movie
Mother and Child
Director
1934
Movie
Everyone Has Their Chance
Director
1930
Movie
The Old and The Young King
Director
1935