MY FUHRER - Grunbaum is summoned by Goebbels

Watch the full film now!: In writer-director Dani Levy’s “My Fuhrer,“ the Reich’s propaganda minister, Joseph Goebbels (Sylvester Groth, “Inglourious Basterds“), is seeing the grim writing on the country’s pre-Berlin wall of late 1944: Germany is losing the war, and a weary Hitler is losing steam and fire. Goebbels thinks he has the answer. Hitler, almost as defeated as his country, must get his mojo back and deliver to the German people an all-important morale-boosting speech that will recharge the nation. The one who can jazz Hitler back into charismatic action is Jewish professor Adolf Grunbaum (the late Ulrich Muhe, award-winning star of the foreign-language Oscar winner “The Lives of Others”), a former drama coach and prewar top theater personality who has been detained but is now sprung by Goebbels from the Sachsenhausen concentration camp. Grunbaum, of course, accepts the job to retool Hitler but on the condition that his wife
Back to Top