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My Life for Ireland

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Initial release
  
17 February 1941

Music director
  
Alois Melichar

Cinematography
  
Richard Angst

5/10
IMDb

Director
  
Producer
  
Hans Lehmann

My Life for Ireland epyimgcomcaIihf2268172844874

Cast
  
Similar
  
Ohm Krüger, Carl Peters, Joan of Arc, Achtung! Feind hört mit!, Kora Terry

Mein liebe fur irland my life for ireland hard coded english subs


My Life for Ireland (German: Mein Leben für Irland) is a Nazi propaganda movie from 1941 directed by Max W. Kimmich, covering a story of Irish heroism and martyrdom over two generations under the occupation of the British. The movie was produced for Nazi-occupied Europe with the intent of challenging pro-British allegiances; yet in some cases it had the unintended effect to make audiences identify the Irish struggle with their own resistance against the Nazis.

Contents

Plot

The film covers the story of two generations of an Irish nationalist family; starting with Michael O'Brien (Werner Hinz) and following with his son, also Michael (Will Quadflieg), eighteen years later in 1921.

The film commences in Dublin in 1903. A squad of police officers break into a thatched hovel and evict the family, throwing a young child to the floor. However they are ambushed by a group of Irish Nationalists and a long fire fight ensues. Michael O'Brien is captured and is sentenced to death. While he is in jail, his pregnant fiancée Maeve visits him and they are secretly married. Afterwards, Michael hands his wife a silver cross that will always be worn by the best Irish freedom fighter. On the cross, the words My life for Ireland are engraved.

Eighteen years later, in 1921, his son Michael Jr. is expecting to pass his school leaving exams. As the son of an infamous Irish nationalist, he has been educated at St Edwards College, a school run by British teachers. In this way the British government attempts to re-educate Irish pupils into "worthful" British civilians. Making them as they think they should be.

Cast

  • Anna Dammann, Maeve Fleming
  • René Deltgen, Robert Devoy
  • Paul Wegener, Sir George Beverley
  • Werner Hinz, Michael O'Brien senior
  • Will Quadflieg, Michael O'Brien junior
  • Heinz Ohlsen, Patrick O'Connor
  • Eugen Klöpfer, Duffy
  • Hans Bergmann, Kapitän der 'Black and Tans'
  • Claus Clausen, Patrick Pollock
  • Will Dohm, Barrington (teacher)
  • Karl John, Raymond Davitt
  • Hans Quest, Henry Beverley
  • Wilhelm Borchert, Thomas O'Neill
  • Charles John, Raymond Davitt
  • Propaganda

    This film contributed to the era of anti-British film. In this film, as in Der Fuchs von Glenarvon, the British are depicted as brutal and unscrupulous oppressors but no match for the Irish. A British officer, for instance, simply abandons an Irish sergeant on the battlefield, taking the last water bottle with him, and winning the Victoria Cross. It lacks, however, the cruder propaganda of later films, such as Carl Peters and Ohm Krüger, when Hitler had given up hope of making peace with Great Britain. The anti-British atmosphere of the film, however, can be judged from the opening sequence, which depicts a meeting of Irish revolutionaries:

    ASSEMBLY: We must build new roads
    LEADER: With what shall we build new roads?
    ASSEMBLY: With the bones of our enemy!
    LEADER: And who is our enemy?
    ASSEMBLY: England!

    Some German viewers in ethnically mixed areas expressed fears that it would stimulate Poles to rebellion. The film, however, enjoyed a positive response from many audiences.

    References

    My Life for Ireland Wikipedia