Hans Bertram is the third in the Nazi regime, after Ernest Udet and Carl Ritter, who combined a career as a fighter pilot with a film career. Bertram was born in 1906 in Germany. In the early 1920s he learned to fly and became a professional pilot. From 1927 he was an aviation consultant to the Chinese government and was involved in the establishment of its maritime aviation service.
"Flight to Hell" Adventure - In April 1928, about a year after Charles Lindbergh's historic flight from New York to Paris, a German Yonkers W-33 sea plane crossed the Atlantic Ocean from east to west for the first time and the German pilots recieved a victory parade in New York. A few weeks later, elections were held in Germany, in which the Nazi Party won, for the first time, 12 seats in parliament.
About four years later, on February 29, 1932, pilot Hans Bertram and mechanic Adolf Klausmann set out from the German city of Cologne to fly around the world on the same airplane model. For about ten weeks they successfully flew east. On 15 May 1932, they left Timur, with the aim of making the first overnight flight to Australia. They made a mistake in navigating, landing hundreds of miles west of their original destination. They also made a mistake on their way back, moving even further away from civilization. They struggled to survive in various ways and were eventually rescued after 52 days, forty of them without food. The search for them made headlines in the international press of the time.
After recovering, Bertram returned to the airplane, continued on a flight across Australia and from there returned flying it to Germany. Hitler came to power on January 30, 1933, and established his rule until about Easter 1933, the date on which Bertram landed back in Berlin, where he was welcomed as a hero.
Bertram wrote his experiences in a book called "Flight to Hell," which became a bestseller with millions of copies and is been sold successfully even today. The name of the book is reminiscent of Howard Hughes' movie ''Hell's Angels" (1930). In 1987 the Australian Broadcasting Corporation produced a mini-series based on the book.
In 1934, Bertram joined the Nazi Party, writing screenplays and directing films. At the same time he continued to serve as a Luftwaffe pilot.
Overseas Adventure Films - Documentary travel films were a popular genre in the Weimar Republic and the Third Reich. Apparently it was a genre that documents an authentic journey abroad to obtain scientific information. The hero in these films is a lone wolf, often a pilot, who fight bravely to document with the camera invaluable scientific information. In fact, his expedition presented the fighting values of strength, determination and sacrifice. He fought to bring valuable treasures to the homeland. Using the camera in analogy to the pstol, the filmmaker captured potential areas for the new living space.
In addition to documentaries, feature films whose themes are adventures abroad were a vital part of all the movie genres prevalent in Nazi Germany. They provided the audience with a sense of partnership on research trips to faraway lands, along with a partnership in building the empire, without having to leave home. These films accounted for about 10 percent of all films produced in 1933, and close to 20 percent in 1939. These films dealt with fundamental questions of society, including: the attitude of the Aryan race towards others, the sense of community and loyalty to its members, the need for resources, building a German home in a distant land, dealing with sexuality in a women-free environment and more. Their common combination of a strong sense of realism and propaganda, along with a tragic ending, established the "Heimat" emotion, the longing for the pure German home. They justified the Germans sense of ownership of land in the "living space".
"Women to the Golden Mountain" (1938), for which Hans Bertram wrote the script, was a typical overseas adventure film. The film is about a group of gold miners on a remote mountain in Australia, who invite wives by mail. The women adapt well, but a heart-to-heart fight creates a confrontation between two men, which ends in the killing of one of them by his friend, who is a former pilot. The pilot flees the scene, but returns with an airplane to locate his friends, after the state lost contact with them following a sandstorm.
Hans Bertram's Aviation Films - Bertram's work in the adventures genre formed the basis for his subsequent war films, which dealt with the lives of young pilots, from the beginning of their training at the Luftwaffe until their participation in the war. The films feature young members of the Nazi party, who face distance from home, and demonstrate their independence and skills, along with their masculinity.
"Baptism of Fire'' (1940) is a documentary by Hans Bertram. The film shows precisely how the Luftwaffe destroys Polish communications facilities and airfields and provides close air support to ground forces in their rapid movement. The announcer tells viewers that "the young Luftwaffe is ready to fight and destroy like a sword in the sky, ready for battle, determined for war and will destroy anyone who tries to sabotage peace in Europe." The film ends with Goering's speech: ''These very impressive pictures bring home, to the German people, the great impact of the campaign in Poland and especially the part of our Luftwaffe, who has carried out combat missions for future generations. We owe to the Luftwaffe, in particular, the contribution to the defeat and destruction of the enemy… ''. "Baptism of Fire" was very effective as intimidation propaganda and was screened at German embassies across Europe, in front of a local invited audience.
''D III 88'' (1939) is a war-propaganda aviation film by Bertram, whose plot deals with two fellow pilots in a seaplanes squadron, who compete with each other in the air and are suspended from flying. They nevertheless embark on an emergency flight in which they manage to discover the enemy fleet, but land in the sea and their plane capsizes. To look for them, the veteran squadron sergeant leaves, in a fighter airplane left over from the First World War, whose serial number is the name of the film. The aviation myth is particularly prominent in this scenes. A halo of mystical fog surrounds the ancient plane, which is stored in a separate hangar as a museum item. On the wall hang pictures of the pilots who flew in it and died. A long flashback scene describe the plane's last flight. The plane was kept intact thanks to its pilot, who became a "sacrificing savior". The film was a huge success and was recommended by the Nazi critics.
"Bombers Wing Lutzau" (1941) is a Nazi war and propaganda film by Bertram. The film is popular sequel to "D III 88", with the same participants. The plot deals with life long airplanes crews career, during the First World War, the Spanish Civil War and their experiences in a time of peace. They have to prove themselves during the attack on Poland and then the wing performs missions on the Western Front and against England.
During 1941, Hans Bertram's fighter airplane was shot down in Libya. He was captured and sent, apparently, to a POW camp in Australia.
In all, Bertram wrote the screenplays for 10 films completed between 1938 and 1985 and directed six films. In the early 1950s he set up an aerial photography company in Germany. He died in 1993 in Munich.
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