Schtonk!

One of the first funny german look at its past.

Schtonk! is a farce of the actual events of 1983, when Germany's Stern magazine published, with great fanfare, 60 volumes of the alleged diaries of Adolf Hitler – which two weeks later turned out to be entirely fake. Fritz Knobel (based on real-life forger Konrad Kujau) supports himself by faking and selling Nazi memorabilia. When Knobel writes and sells a volume of Hitler's (nonexistent) diaries, he thinks it's just another job. When sleazy journalist Hermann Willié learns of the diaries, however, he quickly realizes their potential value... and Knobel is quickly in over his head. As the pressure builds and Knobel is forced to deliver more and more volumes of the fake diaries, he finds himself acting increasingly like the man whose life he is rewriting. The film is a romping and hilarious satire, poking fun not only at the events and characters involved in the hoax (who are only thinly disguised in the film), but at the discomfort Germany has with its difficult past.

Comedy
History

You Might Also Like

  • Experiment Stuka
  • Operation Foxley: The Assassination of Hitler
  • La estrella de David
  • Scrap Happy Daffy
  • Sharkenstein
  • Ukraine on Fire
  • A Hidden Life
  • WWII From Space
  • The Assisi Underground
  • Hitler's Folly
  • Will It Happen Again?
  • Spies
  • Meu diário no fim do mundo: Edição futebol
  • The Last Chance: Diary of Comedians
  • Freaky Tales
  • The Great King
  • No Escape
  • The Lost Ship
  • Two Portraits of MIYAGINO
  • Nazi Concentration Camps