ARTICLE OF THE DAY

08/07/2026

When Donald Duck threw a tomato in Hitler's face

Der Führer's Face and animated propaganda during WWII

Der Führer's Face and animated propaganda during WWII
A theatrical pamphlet from the Hōgaku-za Cinema (now Marunouchi Piccadilly), Tokyo, March 27, 1940, numbered 13. The cover features Donald Duck from the short film Self Control (1938). In the Cherrygarden Collection, acquired by Sawaguchi Bookstore, Jimbocho, Tokyo; scanned by Fred Cherrygarden - WikimediaCommons.

Der Fuehrer’s Face, directed by Jack Kinney in 1943 for Disney Productions, is one of the most significant and well-known examples of American film propaganda during World War II. The animated short, starring Donald Duck, had a strong cultural impact, even winning the Oscar for Best Short Film, a testament to its effectiveness in conveying an accessible political message.

The animated film opens with a musical sequence featuring caricatures of Goebbels, Mussolini, Tōjō, and other Nazi leaders, presented in a deliberately grotesque manner. Thus, the short establishes its satirical intent from the outset: to ridicule the Axis leaders and debunk their rhetoric through humor and comic exaggeration. The setting is typical of the German countryside, featuring a regime-stamped building: inside, Donald sleeps peacefully, but is awakened by music and a Reich alarm clock. A cuckoo clock with the Führer's face and portraits of Axis leaders can be glimpsed. After a very rationed breakfast, Donald is escorted to work by the band.

In the factory, Donald is forced to follow a frenetic schedule, constantly giving Nazi salutes to images of Hitler, and subjected to the psychological pressure of the regime. The use of comedy, alternating with moments of tension, allows for a harsh criticism of Hitler's personality cult and a demonstration of the illogicality of the totalitarian system. Ultimately, it turns out to be a nightmare. The short ends in an iconic way: Donald, upon awakening, throws a tomato at a portrait of the Führer, a scene that will remain in historical memory.

The making of the short is part of the broader framework of American propaganda. In 1942, the Office of War Information (OWI), a new government institution, enabled a massive propaganda campaign (domestic propaganda), particularly by major film studios such as Disney, Warner Bros., and MGM, which played a central role in producing media materials supporting the war effort.

In these cartoons, the figures of the Axis leaders were caricatured and emphasised: Hitler as a hysterical character, Mussolini as a clumsy ally, and Hiroito and Tōjō with racial stereotypes. These depictions not only served a comical purpose but also contributed to constructing an easily recognisable, open-to-criticism image of the enemy.



Bibliography:

G. Bendazzi, Animation: A World History: Volume I: Foundations - The Golden Age, CRC Press, Boca Raton, 2017.

M.S. Schull, D.E. Wilt, Doing Their Bit: Wartime American Animated Short Films, 1939–1945, McFarland & Company, London, 2004.

Websites: Der Fuehrer’s Face, Internet Archive. (consulted November 2025)

Author:

Michele Vitale laureando in Scienze Storiche a UniFi

Publication date:
08/07/2026
Translator:
Paola Manunta