"Laughing with Hitler" is a journey into a supposedly humorless time. In the Third Reich, however, the Führer and his Nazi bigwigs were laughed at. The political jokes of the Hitler years were a barometer of true public opinion. But those who dared to make jokes critical of the regime lived dangerously. In the early Nazi era, Hitler jokes were punished as "insidious", during the war even as "undermining of military strength" and the penalty was the death penalty! The conflict with the Nazi authorities ended more mildly for other pranksters: the cheeky cabaret artist Werner Finck was deported to a concentration camp, but was released again.
After Sumsemann the beetle loses one of his arms to a troll, he invites brother and sister Peterchen and Annaliese to join him on a journey to the moon in a quest to retrieve his lost arm.
After Sumsemann the beetle loses one of his arms to a troll, he invites brother and sister Peterchen and Annaliese to join him on a journey to the moon in a quest to retrieve his lost arm.
Lewis Collins is back to leading mercenaries on the move in Southeast Asia. This time the cast is unusually good including Lee Van Cleef, Brett Halsey (Cop Game), Romano Puppo (Robowar), Mike Monty (Raiders of Atlantis), Bobby Rhodes (The Great Alligator), etc. Anyway, Van Cleef has Collins go on some random mission to locate a disc with all sorts of valuable crazy intelligence data on it. It just happens that Donald Pleasence, a random government official, hires another mercenary-for-hire Manfred Lehman to tag along and make sure the data ends up in the right hands. Van Cleef isn't taking any chances, and since he is crooked and murders Collins's other bosses quickly, he places Romano Puppo in the group as well to make sure the operation runs smoothly. Collins may not be too expressive but at least he seems to figure out quickly who's out to get him, so the mission continues with lots of double-crosses, twists and turns, and of course lots of explosions!
Para contar com a ajuda das tribos nativas em sua rebelião, o General Ramirez (Roberto Carmadiel) o líder da revolução, precisa recuperar um importante ídolo asteca que está desaparecido. Para isso, ele contrata Alleluja (George Hilton) um pistoleiro rápido no gatilho e impiedoso com seus inimigos. Porém, o poderoso símbolo também exerce atração em outros indivíduos principalmente num poderoso capitalista que vê na antiguidade, uma grande oportunidade para conseguir exclusividade na exportação de ouro. Mas, para isso ele precisa primeiro impedir que Alleluja cumpra sua missão e depois vender o ídolo para o comandante inimigo. Segundo filme da série "Alleluja", estrelada por George Hilton, erroneamente lançado no Brasil como episódio da série "Sartana" (nas legendas em português, o nome original do pistoleiro também é "traduzido" para Sartana).
East Berlin, shortly after the construction of the Berlin Wall. Kurt Schröder and his family dig a tunnel to escape to West Berlin as they struggle to overcome the obstacles blocking their underground path to freedom.