Duped Till Doomsday

Duped Till Doomsday

74 mins | Drama, Crime, War | March 7, 1957

East Germany's contribution to the 1957 Cannes Film Festival was the wartime melodrama Betrogen bis zum Juengsten Tag. Had the film been released in the U.S., the title would probably have translated to Duped Till the Last. The film condemns the Nazi mindset by concentrating on a particularly odious cover-up. When his son is involved in the accidental killing of a girl, a Gestapo general pulls strings to save the boy from prosecution. The general manages to pin the blame for the killing on a group of Russians, whereupon he gives the men under his command carte blanche to round up and execute as many innocent Russians as they wish. This act of brutality is contrasted with the pangs of guilt suffered by the son and his co-conspirators.

Duped Till Doomsday

74 mins | Drama, Crime, War | March 7, 1957

Duped Till Doomsday
East Germany's contribution to the 1957 Cannes Film Festival was the wartime melodrama Betrogen bis zum Juengsten Tag. Had the film been released in the U.S., the title would probably have translated to Duped Till the Last. The film condemns the Nazi mindset by concentrating on a particularly odious cover-up. When his son is involved in the accidental killing of a girl, a Gestapo general pulls strings to save the boy from prosecution. The general manages to pin the blame for the killing on a group of Russians, whereupon he gives the men under his command carte blanche to round up and execute as many innocent Russians as they wish. This act of brutality is contrasted with the pangs of guilt suffered by the son and his co-conspirators.
Producers DEFA
Original title Betrogen bis zum jüngsten Tag
Directors Kurt Jung-Alsen
Writers Franz Fühmann, Kurt Bortfeldt

Cast

Rudolf Ulrich

as Corporal Wagner Karl

Wolfgang Kieling

as Private Lick

Erich Brauer

as Hauptfeldwebel

Hans-Joachim Martens

as Upper gunner Paulun Thomas

Walther Suessenguth

as captain von der Saale

Renate Küster

as Angelika, his daughter

Peter Kiwitt

as General of the Waffen-SS Lick

Hermann Dieckhoff

as Division commander

Kurt Ulrich

as lieutenant

Hannes Fischer

as Kitchen sergeant

Helga Raumer

as Innkeeper daughter

Paul Pfingst

as SS man

Carlo Kluge

as SS man

Werner Senftleben

as Sergeant in the shooting range

Hermann Mayer-Falkow

as Major in the shooting range

Horst Kube

as Soldier in the telephone exchange

Gerhard Lau

as Gas, sergeant

Lu Marek

as russian peasant woman