KAREL LAMAČ (1987-1952), who worked in Germany for a long time, was forced to leave for France and then Great Britain before Hitler's fascism, where he continued to direct films. His film Švejk is Destroying Germany from 1943 was created under the influence of wartime circumstances and was intended mainly for a British audience. Perhaps this is also why the tone of the original Czech hero of Hašek's humorous original deviates from his traditional way of portraying him. He transfers him to the wartime reality of the time and, through a series of coincidences, makes him a military servant of the Gestapo commander, which gives Švejk the opportunity to save many people from deportation to concentration camps. Lamač is therefore not driven by the motive of an authorial interpretation but rather by the need for propaganda. This is also emphasized by Foreign Minister Jan Masaryk, whose opening words were added to this comedy in 1947, when it was released into Czechoslovak film distribution.
Karel Lamač
Director
Lloyd Pearson
Josef Schweik

Maggie Rennie
Madame Lidia Karova

Julien Mitchell
Gestapo Chief

Richard Attenborough
Railway worker

George Carney
Gendarme
Jan Masaryk
Narrator
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Buck Privates68%
Oh! What a Lovely War66%
Chris Rock: Bigger & Blacker74%
Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb81%
Fun with Dick and Jane66%
Sahara64%
Die Hart59%
Hot Shots! Part Deux65%
Shoulder Arms68%
Johnny English Strikes Again62%
No Time for Sergeants73%
Duck Soup73%
Jimmy Carr: Natural Born Killer64%
Carry On Sergeant63%
The Great Dictator82%
Wayne's World66%
You Can't Win 'Em All58%
The Naked Gun 2½: The Smell of Fear68%
The Devil's Disciple66%