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Hangmen Also Die! (1943)

6.9 | Apr 15, 1943 (US) | Drama, Thriller, War | 02:14

The shot heard 'round the world!

During the Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia, surgeon Dr. Franticek Svoboda, a Czech patriot, assassinates the brutal "Hangman of Europe", Reichsprotektor Reinhard Heydrich, and is wounded in the process. In his attempt to escape, he is helped by history professor Stephen Novotny and his daughter Mascha.

Featured Crew

Original Story, Producer, Adaptation, Director
Director of Photography
Adaptation, Original Story
Set Decoration
Screenplay
Art Direction
Assistant Director
Sound Recordist
Makeup Artist

Cast

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Brian Donlevy
Dr. Franticek Svoboda
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Walter Brennan
Prof. Stephen Novotny
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Anna Lee
Masha Novotny
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Gene Lockhart
Emil Czaka
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Dennis O'Keefe
Jan Horak
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Margaret Wycherly
Ludmilla Novotny
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Nana Bryant
Mrs. Hellie Novotny
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William Roy
Boda Novotny
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Alexander Granach
Gestapo Insp. Alois Gruber

Reviews

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CinemaSerf
7 | Jun 26, 2022
Fritz Lang has assembled a really solid cast for this depiction of the Nazi terror inflicted on the Czech people after they decided to rid themselves of their German overlord Reinhard Heydrich. That historical event happens pretty early on, allowing us to focus on just how brutal the regime was, and on just how courageous those left were by continuing to oppose their oppressors despite some fairly arbitrary methods of retribution. The assassin must find shelter, evade detection and learn whom to trust as he watches those around him suffer - regardless of any guilt. Probably my favourite performance comes via the collaborating "Czaka" (Gene Lockhart) who plays the local beer magnate-cum-stooge really quite well. Walter Brennan is likewise effective as the elderly historian professor "Novotny" as is Alexander Granach as the Gestapo man charged with finding the original culprit. It is a little heavy on the dialogue side at times, but the director takes his time to imbue a real sense of the horror faced by the population as lawful lawlessness gradually robbed them of even the most basic of civil liberties, and the darkly lit photography is particularly evocative too. It's been retold once or twice, but to nowhere near the same standard and though largely a work of fiction, is still potent stuff.