He was in Hogan's Heroes, but would only accept the role if he could the Germans as "delusional fools". He was a German Jew who survived Hitler's destruction of Germany.
@@patriot9455 my Mother's side of the family survived Hitler, and WW2 also. A couple of their farms were turned into POW Labor Camps, under duress. They held French, Brits, and Yanks to work the fields.
Played in several episodes of the PERRY MASON TV series All the Germans were played by refugee Jews - General Burkhalter Leon Askin, Werner Klemperer Klink John Banner Schultz Howard Caine (aka Cohen) as Major Hochstetter was American Robert Clary, who recently passed away was a Polish refugee Jew born Robert Wiseman He was arrested and sent to Auschwitz at 16 surviving 3 years
@@heavybreath I wonder how many people watching Hogan's Hero's were even remotely aware of the history and experience of the cast members on that show.
One Step Beyond was a brilliant show- it aired when I was a kid- im 66 Werner Klemperer was a highly unappreciated actor- who was really a dramatic performer. He also was a musician, and conductor
There's an old movie about the Holocaust starring both Werner Klemperer and John Banner as members of the SS. I believe it's called The Eichmann Project.
Loved this show. It was one of the first serious attempts at looking at this type of phenomenon in a serious way on tv. Intelligent, charismatic host, researched topics, and good acting and writing made the show a fascinating watch.
He also appeared on the Man From Uncle. "The Project Strigas Affair". Interesting to note that in that same episode both William Shatner AND Leonard Nimoy appeared as well.
It's nice to know that Werner Klemperer every so now and then had the opportunity to portray a character with some depth and emotion, and not an idiot.
@@TheKazadoodle That's not to say there weren't serious, even weird problems with the series. One I have really noticed lately is the strange code of ethics. In one episode, the boys overpowered some German guards -- possibly SS guards, though I do not remember that detail -- but they only tie them up, rather than knifing them. They run a risk to keep these guards alive. Then they wreck the train, with the implication being that everyone on board dies. They do this kind of thing a lot -- never killing people on screen, but happily blowing up trains, factories, whatever, killing both military and civilians, men and women. It might make sense for them to be squeamish, as good guys; it might be more realistic to see them as ruthless, out of practical necessity. Either way, they should be more CONSISTENT.
Klemperer was one of the many German actor refugees that fled Germany due to the Nazis taking control. And many of them found employment in Hollywood ... playing Nazis. Can you imagine having to flee your home because some assholes take it over, only to find yourself playing such an asshole in the country you flee to?
Werner Klemperer as Klink is a perfect example of Hollywood’s Central Casting with his mannerisms and the required monocle he was perfect his superior General Burqhalter was also right out of Hollywood’s Central Casting .
@@jackkircher1755 So was John (Johann) Banner who played Sgt Shultz. He was born in Austria and moved to the United States. He enlisted in the United States Army in 1942 working in supply and attaining the rank of Sgt. Most of his family died in the holocaust.
@@jackkircher1755 Jack, my sir, when it was pointed out to these cast members from "Hogan's Heroes" who played these German officers that they were Jews, one of them said, "Who better to make fun of the Germans than the Jews?"
@@MegaJustGeorge I read the same interview. Klemperer also stressed that Klink was NOT a Nazi, but, instead a Luftwaffe officer with a thorough dislike of the Party.
I loved this show as a boy. I was 7-8 and addicted to sci-fi/horror (still am). I watched this and Twilight Zone all by my little self. There was another weekly anthology during the same era called, "Way Out," which used to scare the bejesus outta me!
I heard Werner made a point of taking roles where he could denigrate nazism even when it meant playing a buffoon. He was a talented comic. It is good to see him in a drama for a change.
@@foobarmaximus3506 Quite the contrary, my demoralized & ideologically subverted little friend. Pay attention to Yuri Bezmenov as he explains how you have been thoroughly and hopelessly brainwashed. ua-cam.com/video/d9CJmvBXNTc/v-deo.html If, by some miracle, anything Yuri said resonates with you and you would like to hear a more thorough explanation.... you can easily find two entire lectures of his on UA-cam. If not, keep on keeping on. In this day and age, it's trendy to be a "useful idiot", and that's probably what your after anyway.
I don't know which is more nostalgic. Seeing Werner Klemperer on the boat or seeing him knocked out with a chop to the neck. ah, the classic knock out chop. Wonderful!
Uh, those "chops" work. I watched my Dad give a strike to a man's neck back in the 1970s. Dropped him like a hot potato. He was trying to rob us on the interstate outside of Dallas, Texas. The man turned his gun on 13 year old me and my Dad hit him somehow on the side of his neck and the guy was out cold. Dad told me to get back on the touring motorcycle he had just bought and we rode in a pouring rain to the first business we came to. We went in and he used a phone to call police. But yes, I saw it myself. I asked Dad how he did that 100 times after that and he would only say, lucky shot I guess, kiddo. I took care of him after he got a type of oxygen depravation dementia. He told me after I began taking care of him never to turn my back on him if he was confused. I never did, not in 10 years. I knew better.
I worked with a former diesel boat (submarine) crewman. He said that if a crew member was in a flooding section or on deck after hatches were sealed, ( in an emergency dive) too bad for that guy. The skipper would not risk the boat.
Got goosebumps when Newland said, "the story began SOME years ago...". At the time of his narration, it really was 'some' years ago. Today, we would say, some decades ago or even in the last century....😲
I lived through a LARGE part of the 20th century, and ANYONE, who is 20 or older today, only know the 21st century … but they haven’t had the low prices in stores like I did; candy bars at 5 cents, and packs of 5 sticks of gum at 5 cents, like they are supposed to be … 😊
The irony of course is that like many German actors Klemperer had to flee Germany to escape Nazi persecution. Then he made a career out of playing Nazis.
U-147's third and final patrol began on 24 May 1941. A week later, she torpedoed the British freighter Gravelines northwest of the Bloody Foreland (western Ireland), which broke in two and was declared a total loss; the forward part of the ship was towed to the Clyde and scrapped. On 2 June U-147 encountered convoy OB 239 near the African coast and attacked alone (a decision which historian Clay Blair described as "bold"). She damaged one ship, (Mokambo), before being sunk with all hands by a British destroyer, HMS Wanderer, HMS Periwinkle.
hi there was an avid watcher of the twilight zone but never heard of this show, thanks for uploading its a great show really appreciate you doing this cheers
@@jamesalexander3530 You are a COMPLETE IDIOT, James. David Smith did not say the Germans were the good guys; he says he wishes they were either better people or more easily defeated. If they had been better people they would not have chosen to commit the atrocities that still shock the world; if they had been more easily defeated they would not have had the prisoners to torture or the time to torture them.
The banging/knocking reminded me of 'The Tell-Tale Heart.' Another great episode from 'One Step Beyond.' This show used to freak me out when I was a kid, but I loved it, and 'Twilight Zone.'
thanks for sharing this. ...I love these classic shows. ..compared to the tripe and so called "hits" CGI junk..non actors of today.........I only watch videos that are timeless like westerns..and Sci fi....I love fireball xl5......I am glad you fill your channel with some GREAT CONTENT .......GREAT JOB !
Robbi496 The actors on Hogan’s Heroes who played Klink Burkhalter Hochstetter and Schultz all insisted that their characters were like that. Most of them had relatives of themselves that had been in the concentration camps. Howard Caine who played Hochstetter was an accomplished banjo player who won awards for his playing
@@kenclark9888 so sorry I didn't see what you had written, when I see where someone posses a question and I know something of the answer I just answer it and don't bother to see if someone else knows the same information. From know on I will remind my old brain to read what others say so I don't repeat them. Again so sorry that I repeated what you said.
Great episode, never seen these before. Although U147 was sunk with all hands by HMS Wanderer on 2nd June 1941 off the coast of Ireland. If they’d picked a U boat that had survived, would have put some credibility to the story. Great acting, which is hard to find these days.
For anyone interested in U Boats & WW 2, this is a very good watch-unless the viewer has an ultra strict dismissive attitude to the supernatural of course. Well acted and an impressive story line.
@@colinstewart1432 I suspect you are correct amigo.Some of them may [?] haves been -for example- secret German "wonder weapons" being tested. Best etc.
This series was a great concept - a horror show based on truth! I barely remembered it until I started watching two days ago. Definitely overshadowed by Twilight Zone and The Outer Limits.
In 1990 I was at the Royal Navy Base at Portsmouth, and got chatting to a civilian Historian. He told the story of the Battleship HMS Warspite, a First World War veteran of the Battle Jutland. She was in for major refit in August 1939, and during checking a bulkhead they found 2 skeletons. They were of two young sailors, who believed to have been washed overboard at Jutland. They checked the RN records and found out both only 16 years old when they passed away.
Paul Leckner, it is actually an incident that has never occurred. No one has been able to find documentation of such an incident, let alone multiple incidents. It is a yarn, a tale, a legend. It is not established fact.
The Warspite was the ship that did huge amounts of damage even though it was tiny and when they tried to scarp it the ship escaped. They were towing it to the scrap yard when the line broke and it floated away. Some time later they found that it had beached itself on some rocks and no matter what they tried they were unable to tow it free and take it to scrap.. The ship never gave up.
Mark Wilko The battleship USS Nevada has a similar story. It was the target ship for the atomic bomb test at Bikini Atoll and took a direct hit, but didn’t sink. It was towed to Hawaii to become a radioactive research lab, but broke loose in a storm. She was declared a menace to navigation and hit by two 16 inch shells, 2 torpedoes, and an early guided missile but still didn’t sink. One more 16 inch shell finally put her on the bottom. However..after the ship was sunk, an accounting review found that due to a shortage of copper in the early part of the war, the circuit boards for her main guns, damaged at Pearl Harbor, had been replaced with the next best available conductor: solid 24 karat gold. She took more than $2 million of 1947 value gold to the bottom with her.
May dad was a POW in Germany we used to watch Hogan’s Hero’s, I was young asked him once if the Germans in his camp that funny. He looked at me and said shit no. He told me of all that happened while in prison, I think he was just happy to have made it home.
True story: A good friend of mine who went to college in D.C. once wandered into a Georgetown bar and there sat Werner Klemperer and John Banner (Sgt. Schultz) hanging out over a couple of beers.
I remember seeing several variations of this story. One on the Twilight Zone with an American ship and another in a comic book called Weird War Tales. All, including this one, were very good.
Golly. My father served on the carrier Block Island in WWII. It was sunk by a Uboat. In the 1960's, my father had a coworker who had been in a concentration camp. One time we were invited to his home for dinner. Met his wife, who was also in the same camp as her husband. They both had numbers on their arms. They were German Jews.
It's not the first time unknown pounding have been heard. Sometimes in the ships hull. Only to found out years later. When it's going to be scrape only to find humans remains.
Something similar happened in the US Navy, I think on the Kitty Hawk. She was going through refit sometime back in the 70s when someone who was looking at the plans realized that there should have been a workspace on the other side of the bulkhead. So they cut through the bulkhead to find a completely equipped machine shop...along with the skeletal remains of two yard workers. Apparently, the two yard workers had been entombed during a prior refit. One would have thought that the supervisor would have noticed a couple of his workers suddenly going missing....
That is incredible! I served in the Navy and suppose should have reported the strange voices coming from the head, crying, "Booo, ass wipes, where's the ass wipes .... booohoo". Very scary stuff.
As soon as Werner Klemperer appears in any show, even in a serious role, all the Hogan's Heroes jokes come to the surface!(get it? "come to the surface", like a submarine! LOL)
@Agent J Hmmmm.... it WAS interesting to see Werner Klemperer playing a straight dramatic role, ohne(German for "without") the monocle or the urge to say "diiiiisssssmmmmmiiiiissssseeeeedddd"!
@Agent J My point being there are only odd examples of Klemperer in serious roles. One other that I know of is in the movie "Judgement At Nuremberg". Klemperer has become known for his role as Kommandantur, Col. Klink in "Hogan's Heroes" and that role has overshadowed his serious acting, either in stage, film or TV.
@Agent J: I'm male! My appearance is a result of having to take a substitute tablet to compensate for the missing thyroid gland at my birth in 1955. But I think you're starting to ramble and go off-topic here. The subject was Werner Klemperer playing serious roles when he was best-known for his comedic role as Col. Klink in "Hogan's Heroes".
As is the "tap tap tap" or "knock knock knock" of the "wee" folk if disrespect them ....said be a Norse/Celtic thing like the Knotty Ash Diddymen ....move away or be driven mad ...
If it is possible that this story is even partially true in any way, they used the wrong U-Boat. Look it up, this never happened to U147 as it was sunk June 2, 1941.
I'm an old fart but when I saw this as a kid I didn't sleep for a few nights. Now while I'm a skeptic on these things I've always found this episode haunting.
7:14 🍺 LOL this is a German Drinking Song-back in 1990 I need one credit at UCONN to graduate with Bachelor’s so I took “German Folksongs” on Wednesday afternoons with Professor Lederer (grew up in Germany as a young man during WW II. The class was in a lecture hall and some of the crazier classmates would smuggle in beer and we would literally be drinking in the back whilst singing “Ein Prozeit.” I guess that was the best class as far as fun and I never forgot the song. RIP Professor Lederer-a fun and entertaining man who taught us the Joys of German Drinking Songs.
Knox....I was a military wife in the 70's and my husband was stationed in Augsburg, Germany and we must have hit every beer fest in the area...I remember ein swie stofa(SP). .and the beers were served in liter mugs and the beer fraus would carry 8 mugs of beer at a time.. And one would carry around a bucket with schanopes. It was a mark a shot. Peppermint schanopes was the best,,!!!!Lived in Augsburg 72 to 75.Then Berlin 76 to 78. Great times!!!!
Loved this episode when it first aired! Klemperer was a highly underappreciated, and underrated dramatic actor. 💯👍👏
He was in Hogan's Heroes, but would only accept the role if he could the Germans as "delusional fools". He was a German Jew who survived Hitler's destruction of Germany.
@@patriot9455 my Mother's side of the family survived Hitler, and WW2 also. A couple of their farms were turned into POW Labor Camps, under duress. They held French, Brits, and Yanks to work the fields.
Played in several episodes of the PERRY MASON TV series All the Germans were played by refugee Jews - General Burkhalter Leon Askin, Werner Klemperer Klink John Banner Schultz Howard Caine (aka Cohen) as Major Hochstetter was American Robert Clary, who recently passed away was a Polish refugee Jew born Robert Wiseman He was arrested and sent to Auschwitz at 16 surviving 3 years
@@heavybreath I wonder how many people watching Hogan's Hero's were even remotely aware of the history and experience of the cast members on that show.
Klemperer and His Family Escaped Germany in The 1930s When Hitler took Power.
Wow, Werner Klemperer's range was amazing. Always delivered well whatever role. Thanks!
Yeah I love sniffing g kids hair at the mall
He was hardly tested in this TV episode. Any ham actor could have done it.
@@keithammleter3824 and you of course could have done better?
"Hogan!"
@@keithammleter3824 There is a ham in keithhammleter.
One Step Beyond was a brilliant show- it aired when I was a kid- im 66 Werner Klemperer was a highly unappreciated actor- who was really a dramatic performer. He also was a musician, and conductor
So you were abducted by aliens 👽
I want to stop by the Little Alien some day! :-)
When some actors take a role they get typecast and only get roles as that character. Didnt know he was a trained musician. Cool
His father, Otto Klemperer, was a world famous conductor. Werner came from a musical family, but never played or conducted professionally.
Yes, that Hogan's Heroes was a pay check and I cant blame him for it.
I have never seen Werner Klempere, in a dramatic role before. Thank you for posting this.
There's an old movie about the Holocaust starring both Werner Klemperer and John Banner as members of the SS. I believe it's called The Eichmann Project.
Was klemperer in Judgement at Nuremburg?
@@alysononoahu8702 I think he was
Meh. You haven't looked very hard then.
@@alysononoahu8702Yes he was. He was in some else with John Banner.
Glad this is free !!!! I’m just discovering this today ! Hail old School t.v shows
Thanks for watching PizzaFLIX. May the Sauce be with you.
I saw Werner Klemperer in 1985, when he appeared with the Pittsburgh Philharmonic Orchestra reciting Beethoven's Egbert - very cool. What a talent.
It's like "The thirty fathom grave" on The Twilight zone .
In 81 he came to the university where I was studying music. He narrated "Peter and the Wolf" with our student orchestra.
Very cool 😎,
I believe he played the violin.
One Step Beyond was a weekly treasure. Spellbinding episodes, like this, are great to see again
garbage
Loved this show. It was one of the first serious attempts at looking at this type of phenomenon in a serious way on tv. Intelligent, charismatic host, researched topics, and good acting and writing made the show a fascinating watch.
it was woo-peddling bullshit. you're just gullible.
this was during the time when there were quality shows on with only five minutes of commercials per half hour...those were the days.
Five minutes too many!
It was a time when master craftsmen like Hitchcock and Serling made compact gems for television, on a shoestring budget.
Yes!
@@stephenarling1667 Yes, never to have seen the likes since. TV today, and movies imo are just CRAP!!
Klemperer hated the Nazis, but every time he played one it’s like he was one of them. Brilliant acting!
He was Jewish, his family fled Germany.
@@DennisSullivan-om3oo Same as John Banner he was an Austrian Jew,
Nd these times many people in many countries live the Nazis again
Klemperer really was a fine actor.
and excellent singer!
@T M I've never seen this show, and I know nothing about it, so when I saw "Klemperer" I wondered if it was Col. Klink. Nice
@@BudmanPackfan Conductor too...
@T M Hooooggghaaannnnnn.....
Absolutely
Werner Klemperer - what a fabulous actor. Very talented man.
I only remember Werner Klemplerer from Hogans Hero's. After watching this video i have a greater appriciation for his acting abilities!!
He also appeared on the Man From Uncle. "The Project Strigas Affair". Interesting to note that in that same episode both William Shatner AND Leonard Nimoy appeared as well.
It's nice to know that Werner Klemperer every so now and then had the opportunity to portray a character with some depth and emotion, and not an idiot.
Agreed. I hated Hogan's Heroes. It was one of the very few shows of that era that I loathed.
@@TheKazadoodle You and I disagree, then. But regardless of what you thought of the series, you should have seen that Klemperer was a great actor.
@@TheKazadoodle That's not to say there weren't serious, even weird problems with the series. One I have really noticed lately is the strange code of ethics. In one episode, the boys overpowered some German guards -- possibly SS guards, though I do not remember that detail -- but they only tie them up, rather than knifing them. They run a risk to keep these guards alive. Then they wreck the train, with the implication being that everyone on board dies. They do this kind of thing a lot -- never killing people on screen, but happily blowing up trains, factories, whatever, killing both military and civilians, men and women. It might make sense for them to be squeamish, as good guys; it might be more realistic to see them as ruthless, out of practical necessity. Either way, they should be more CONSISTENT.
@@christosvoskresye I never disputed Werner's acting chops, in fact, I agreed with the OP about it.
calihartley2010
Werner Klemperer played this "true believer" Nazi official to perfection.
Klemperer was an excellent character actor.
All the more amazing when you consider his family placed in a concentration camp by the Nazi's
Yes,and a native German who hated Hitler & the Nazis,he was also a world class violin player.
Klemperer was one of the many German actor refugees that fled Germany due to the Nazis taking control. And many of them found employment in Hollywood ... playing Nazis.
Can you imagine having to flee your home because some assholes take it over, only to find yourself playing such an asshole in the country you flee to?
HIM BEING 200% GERMAN MADE IT NATRUAL
Klemperer has it specified in his contract that Kline was to be a buffoon and never win
One of the best episodes of the series. A must watch for every fan.
I love these shows, been following and watching One Step Beyond since 1960's and 1970's.
Thanks UA-cam.
Werner Klemperer as Klink is a perfect example of Hollywood’s Central Casting with his mannerisms and the required monocle he was perfect his superior General Burqhalter was also right out of Hollywood’s Central Casting .
He wouldn't play the role any other way. He insisted Klink be an idiot.
The German officers in Hogan's Heroes were mostly al jews.
@@jackkircher1755 So was John (Johann) Banner who played Sgt Shultz. He was born in Austria and moved to the United States. He enlisted in the United States Army in 1942 working in supply and attaining the rank of Sgt. Most of his family died in the holocaust.
@@jackkircher1755 Jack, my sir, when it was pointed out to these cast members from "Hogan's Heroes" who played these German officers that they were Jews, one of them said, "Who better to make fun of the Germans than the Jews?"
@@MegaJustGeorge I read the same interview. Klemperer also stressed that Klink was NOT a Nazi, but, instead a Luftwaffe officer with a thorough dislike of the Party.
I've watched this show since I was about 8 or 9.
Always one of my favorites
I served on a WW2 type diesel boat. I wish it had he huge spaces that this hollywood boat has.
My favorite is the guy standing and steering the boat.
Steve Farris: Was that before you joined Mr Mister?
@@Abbeville_Kid lol he was opening and closing the ballast tanks,
Actually Jeff the conning tower steering station was a standing position on the USS CATFISH SS 339.
@@GreenerHill Actually 1955 through 1977. Don't know about Mr Mister?
Werner Klemperer was such a handsome man. RIP..Been gone 21 years already. 💕
I love these classics. The attention to detail in th costumes and sets is amazing 👏
I loved this show as a boy. I was 7-8 and addicted to sci-fi/horror (still am). I watched this and Twilight Zone all by my little self. There was another weekly anthology during the same era called, "Way Out," which used to scare the bejesus outta me!
I heard Werner made a point of taking roles where he could denigrate nazism even when it meant playing a buffoon. He was a talented comic. It is good to see him in a drama for a change.
i like it too but for me its a bit haunting on a personal matter sadly
Wow! What a virtuous guy! ....OR he knew what side of his bread was buttered.
He sold out, just like 99% of the actors in Hollywood do.
@@clementwolf4081 Did you die on a German sub?
@@saintadolf5639 Or - you simply have no idea what you're talking about.
@@foobarmaximus3506 Quite the contrary, my demoralized & ideologically subverted little friend. Pay attention to Yuri Bezmenov as he explains how you have been thoroughly and hopelessly brainwashed. ua-cam.com/video/d9CJmvBXNTc/v-deo.html
If, by some miracle, anything Yuri said resonates with you and you would like to hear a more thorough explanation.... you can easily find two entire lectures of his on UA-cam.
If not, keep on keeping on. In this day and age, it's trendy to be a "useful idiot", and that's probably what your after anyway.
Excellent good old black n white
Speaks volumes
One of my favorite episodes. Thanks for uploading.
I don't know which is more nostalgic. Seeing Werner Klemperer on the boat or seeing him knocked out with a chop to the neck. ah, the classic knock out chop. Wonderful!
Those karate chops got a lot of play back in the late 50s/early 60s TV shows
@@edwardhalpin7503 Those self defense exchange program between Germany and Japan during the war really came in handy.
Uh, those "chops" work. I watched my Dad give a strike to a man's neck back in the 1970s. Dropped him like a hot potato. He was trying to rob us on the interstate outside of Dallas, Texas. The man turned his gun on 13 year old me and my Dad hit him somehow on the side of his neck and the guy was out cold. Dad told me to get back on the touring motorcycle he had just bought and we rode in a pouring rain to the first business we came to. We went in and he used a phone to call police. But yes, I saw it myself. I asked Dad how he did that 100 times after that and he would only say, lucky shot I guess, kiddo. I took care of him after he got a type of oxygen depravation dementia. He told me after I began taking care of him never to turn my back on him if he was confused. I never did, not in 10 years. I knew better.
Makes you appreciate the comic talent even more as Klink.
I worked with a former diesel boat (submarine) crewman. He said that if a crew member was in a flooding section or on deck after hatches were sealed, ( in an emergency dive) too bad for that guy. The skipper would not risk the boat.
Risking a billion dollar vessel for just a few men will never happen. MISSION IS ALWAYS FIRST as it ALWAYS should be!
Got goosebumps when Newland said, "the story began SOME years ago...". At the time of his narration, it really was 'some' years ago. Today, we would say, some decades ago or even in the last century....😲
I lived through a LARGE part of the 20th century, and ANYONE, who is 20 or older today, only know the 21st century … but they haven’t had the low prices in stores like I did; candy bars at 5 cents, and packs of 5 sticks of gum at 5 cents, like they are supposed to be … 😊
Really cool to recognize Werner Klemperer before having to check the description.
RIP, Colonel Klink.
This is a brilliant performance by Klemperer.
I love this series and the great John Newland and Werner Klemperer,,,,love Kilink,,,,love the creepy music in this show,,,,so hauntingly beautiful
Werner Klemperer seems like such a good guy.
As a little kid, this program, the music and John Newland would scare the crap out of me, but I couldn’t help myself, I had to watch, Great program.
cool theme music, too.
The condition of our country today, Scared the crap out of me, Trump twenty twenty four
This whole series was fantastic.
Hooooooogan! Stop knocking on my Submarine!
Schultz: I hear nooothing.
Seargent bullcarter wheres my monicale ?
That's a good one hahaha
"KLINK! Why is zis man pounding here?!!!!"
😁😁😁😁
The irony of course is that like many German actors Klemperer had to flee Germany to escape Nazi persecution. Then he made a career out of playing Nazis.
Nothing wrong with that
He's father was Jewish and the Mom was German. I would think he was an Honorary Aryan
Robert Cleary (LeBeau) actually got caught in concentration camp as a boy.
It's been said, he was starved, and whh hes shorter than he would've been
7ioooouououoouoouou7ouoooooooouoouuoouu7
Aryan on both sides of course Jewish and white Nazi look at the books anymore know the Aryan race went very far into history
Good story. Also an good allegory about the relationship between the German High Command and the UBoat service.
The special effects in this episode are fantastic.
Klemperer was such a great actor, drama or comedy, he was a professional.
A brilliant performance by Werner Klemperer!
I clearly remember watching this episode as a kid in the 1960s!
U-147's third and final patrol began on 24 May 1941. A week later, she torpedoed the British freighter Gravelines northwest of the Bloody Foreland (western Ireland), which broke in two and was declared a total loss; the forward part of the ship was towed to the Clyde and scrapped. On 2 June U-147 encountered convoy OB 239 near the African coast and attacked alone (a decision which historian Clay Blair described as "bold"). She damaged one ship, (Mokambo), before being sunk with all hands by a British destroyer, HMS Wanderer, HMS Periwinkle.
Loved this episode. Maybe it was the beginning of my fascination with UBoats? I’m really happy to see it again. Thanks!
it was the Nautilus for me.
Werner Klemperer had a wide talent for acting... I'm glad it was recognized during Hogan's Hero's
hi there was an avid watcher of the twilight zone but never heard of this show, thanks for uploading its a great show really appreciate you doing this cheers
Where was Sergent Schultz ?? He would have said, I hear Nothhhhing
couldn't fit thru hatch !
Made us LOL!!! :)
😂😂😂
smack dabular ....You made this guy who had a bad week smile
@@gusklimt2031 "What is this man doing here?!" Good old Major Hochstetter.
Well THAT sure as heck was an unexpected ending!
(And Werner Klemperer was underrated as an actor IMO)
Werner Klemper, conductor, classical violinist, superb actor and like his co-star from Hogan's Heroes John Banner, a refugee from Hitler's Germany.
Werner Klemperer 's father Otto Klemperer, was the conductor.
Too bad the real nazis and wehrmact were not as good natured as Klinck and Schultz or dopey as Maj. Hofstadter.
@@DavidSmith-sb2ix Smith? Hmmm, sounds like Herr Schmidt. Are you living in Argentina with Herr Mengele? 🤔 ☺️
@@jamesalexander3530 You are a COMPLETE IDIOT, James. David Smith did not say the Germans were the good guys; he says he wishes they were either better people or more easily defeated. If they had been better people they would not have chosen to commit the atrocities that still shock the world; if they had been more easily defeated they would not have had the prisoners to torture or the time to torture them.
calihartley2010
Just doesn't get any better, pure class 🇬🇧🤠🤟🙏
That can be very spooky 😱 when someone or something knocks very hard on doors or walls. Good episode.
The banging/knocking reminded me of 'The Tell-Tale Heart.'
Another great episode from 'One Step Beyond.'
This show used to freak me out when I was a kid, but I loved it, and 'Twilight Zone.'
thanks for sharing this. ...I love these classic shows. ..compared to the tripe and so called "hits" CGI junk..non actors of today.........I only watch videos that are timeless like westerns..and Sci fi....I love fireball xl5......I am glad you fill your channel with some GREAT CONTENT .......GREAT JOB !
Leesa Gomez Couldnt have said it better myself!
yes I like the model work on this one
Great series on a great channel! THANKS!
Werner was an outstanding actor.
Werner Klemperer was a great actor. He acted like a true Nazi and as Klink, acted like a buffoon :)
Robbi496 The actors on Hogan’s Heroes who played Klink Burkhalter Hochstetter and Schultz all insisted that their characters were like that. Most of them had relatives of themselves that had been in the concentration camps. Howard Caine who played Hochstetter was an accomplished banjo player who won awards for his playing
It is said that they would not play the roles unless it was that way.
Catherine Burk that’s true as I mentioned in my post
@@kenclark9888 so sorry I didn't see what you had written, when I see where someone posses a question and I know something of the answer I just answer it and don't bother to see if someone else knows the same information. From know on I will remind my old brain to read what others say so I don't repeat them. Again so sorry that I repeated what you said.
I saw something on TV one time that said he was Jewish and he loved playing the role of Colonel Klink as an idiot
It's kind of like The Telltale Heart by Edgar Allen Poe.
SpockBoy Thanks for the referral! 💪
Turned out to be The Thumping Wrench!
Great episode, never seen these before. Although U147 was sunk with all hands by HMS Wanderer on 2nd June 1941 off the coast of Ireland. If they’d picked a U boat that had survived, would have put some credibility to the story. Great acting, which is hard to find these days.
For anyone interested in U Boats & WW 2, this is a very good watch-unless the viewer has an ultra strict dismissive attitude to the supernatural of course. Well acted and an impressive story line.
There was a lot of Supernatural phenomena in WW2.
@@colinstewart1432 I suspect you are correct amigo.Some of them may [?] haves been -for example- secret German "wonder weapons" being tested.
Best etc.
My only quibble is that except in a couple of backshots, the interio9rof the boat is absolute nonsense. As is the total lack of tactics by the boat.
Thank you soooo much. I've been searching forever.
This episode scared me to death when I was a kid... Brrrr...
This series was a great concept - a horror show based on truth! I barely remembered it until I started watching two days ago. Definitely overshadowed by Twilight Zone and The Outer Limits.
That must be the cleanest submarine ever.
Indeed. Just grateful to not have smell-o-vision.
@@colinstewart1432 No kidding!
Wow, Werner is fantastic in this.
Werner also played in the Battle of Britain as a luftwaffae general great actor, he was.
That pounding is Kinchloe sending a message to London !
Maybe it was Hogan pounding Helga on the office desk? Lucky dude!
@@fuffoon LOL!
@@fuffoon they were married.
Werner klemperer was a great actor and accomplished violinist
I remember watching this as a rerun as a young child in the mid 60s it's a pretty strong memory and I was pretty young.
I really enjoy these old movies over most of the garbage of today
In 1990 I was at the Royal Navy Base at Portsmouth, and got chatting to a civilian Historian.
He told the story of the Battleship HMS Warspite, a First World War veteran of the Battle Jutland.
She was in for major refit in August 1939, and during checking a bulkhead they found 2 skeletons.
They were of two young sailors, who believed to have been washed overboard at Jutland.
They checked the RN records and found out both only 16 years old when they passed away.
Grahame Willmott, it's an urban legend. The name of the ship changes depending on who is telling the story. You can look it up online.
I am sure it is not an isolated incident.
Paul Leckner, it is actually an incident that has never occurred. No one has been able to find documentation of such an incident, let alone multiple incidents. It is a yarn, a tale, a legend. It is not established fact.
The Warspite was the ship that did huge amounts of damage even though it was tiny and when they tried to scarp it the ship escaped.
They were towing it to the scrap yard when the line broke and it floated away.
Some time later they found that it had beached itself on some rocks and no matter what they tried they were unable to tow it free and take it to scrap..
The ship never gave up.
Mark Wilko The battleship USS Nevada has a similar story. It was the target ship for the atomic bomb test at Bikini Atoll and took a direct hit, but didn’t sink. It was towed to Hawaii to become a radioactive research lab, but broke loose in a storm. She was declared a menace to navigation and hit by two 16 inch shells, 2 torpedoes, and an early guided missile but still didn’t sink. One more 16 inch shell finally put her on the bottom. However..after the ship was sunk, an accounting review found that due to a shortage of copper in the early part of the war, the circuit boards for her main guns, damaged at Pearl Harbor, had been replaced with the next best available conductor: solid 24 karat gold. She took more than $2 million of 1947 value gold to the bottom with her.
May dad was a POW in Germany we used to watch Hogan’s Hero’s, I was young asked him once if the Germans in his camp that funny. He looked at me and said shit no. He told me of all that happened while in prison, I think he was just happy to have made it home.
It is always great to see an actor in a vehicle other than with what we may be more familiar.
This was how I had imagined what living in a WWII sub was like until I saw ‘ Das Boot ‘
Das Boot is a brilliant film
Hollywood always shows WW2 subs being roomy. They were not. Especially German Subs.
True story: A good friend of mine who went to college in D.C. once wandered into a Georgetown bar and there sat Werner Klemperer and John Banner (Sgt. Schultz) hanging out over a couple of beers.
He's just not the same without his monocle.
🧐Hooogaan! (shakes fist)
I think I can honestly say I never expected to see Werner Klemperer again!
I remember seeing several variations of this story. One on the Twilight Zone with an American ship and another in a comic book called Weird War Tales. All, including this one, were very good.
Golly. My father served on the carrier Block Island in WWII. It was sunk by a Uboat. In the 1960's, my father had a coworker who had been in a concentration camp. One time we were invited to his home for dinner. Met his wife, who was also in the same camp as her husband. They both had numbers on their arms. They were German Jews.
Werner Klemperer was highly underrated.
I remember this episode. It was really great.
"....Hoooogaaaannn...if this is another one of your tricks....!"
I. want to get as.far away.from Hogan as I can get!!. Shultz prepare to dive!!.
LOL!!
Shultz would be I hear nothing.
@@ronniewall1481 Totally
a very spooky story! many thanks for uploading it
This is like the best one ever and not just because Colonel Klink is in it 😏
German u-boat 147. Now that John McCain is dead. May the ghosts of the U.S.S. FORRESTAL finally rest in peace. CVA-59.
You're confusing reality with fiction, I'd say
A A 🐙
The real U-147 was sunk in 1941.
Nice acting by Klemper.
"Admiral Burkhalter"!? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_submarine_U-147_(1940)
Wow! Sunk four years earlier. That makes it even spookier.
It's not the first time unknown pounding have been heard. Sometimes in the ships hull. Only to found out years later. When it's going to be scrape only to find humans remains.
For real. Wow I would think so like Hover dam or and really big jobs
Something similar happened in the US Navy, I think on the Kitty Hawk. She was going through refit sometime back in the 70s when someone who was looking at the plans realized that there should have been a workspace on the other side of the bulkhead. So they cut through the bulkhead to find a completely equipped machine shop...along with the skeletal remains of two yard workers. Apparently, the two yard workers had been entombed during a prior refit. One would have thought that the supervisor would have noticed a couple of his workers suddenly going missing....
That is incredible! I served in the Navy and suppose should have reported the strange voices coming from the head, crying, "Booo, ass wipes, where's the ass wipes .... booohoo". Very scary stuff.
Maybe somebody entombed them in there on purpose! 😮
I was on that ship and that was a wives' tale with no merit. Its was just a haloween fabrication started by the captain as a joke to the crew
CaesarInVa, the story sounds like a typical urban legend.
I have heard the same story with the ships name changed over and over again.
Just wait 'til General Burkhalter hears about this; 'You Dummkoff'' !
As soon as Werner Klemperer appears in any show, even in a serious role, all the Hogan's Heroes jokes come to the surface!(get it? "come to the surface", like a submarine! LOL)
Yep 👍👊
😂🤣😅😆
@Agent J Hmmmm.... it WAS interesting to see Werner Klemperer playing a straight dramatic role, ohne(German for "without") the monocle or the urge to say "diiiiisssssmmmmmiiiiissssseeeeedddd"!
@Agent J My point being there are only odd examples of Klemperer in serious roles. One other that I know of is in the movie "Judgement At Nuremberg". Klemperer has become known for his role as Kommandantur, Col. Klink in "Hogan's Heroes" and that role has overshadowed his serious acting, either in stage, film or TV.
@Agent J: I'm male! My appearance is a result of having to take a substitute tablet to compensate for the missing thyroid gland at my birth in 1955. But I think you're starting to ramble and go off-topic here. The subject was Werner Klemperer playing serious roles when he was best-known for his comedic role as Col. Klink in "Hogan's Heroes".
My favorite show as a kid.
This story is an old sailors “Urban legend“, and U147 was actually lost in 1941.
So they say
As is the "tap tap tap" or "knock knock knock" of the "wee" folk if disrespect them ....said be a Norse/Celtic thing like the Knotty Ash Diddymen ....move away or be driven mad ...
That just makes the story even MORE spooky...
"Sea Story" "urban legend".
Type II boat originally captained by Reinhard Hardegen. She was sunk by British destroyers on her third war patrol while attacking a convoy.
One Step Beyond was such a great series................................
If it is possible that this story is even partially true in any way, they used the wrong U-Boat. Look it up, this never happened to U147 as it was sunk June 2, 1941.
No dip.. it's a tv show
I'm an old fart but when I saw this as a kid I didn't sleep for a few nights. Now while I'm a skeptic on these things I've always found this episode haunting.
Werner Klemperer's Shatner moment - awesome :D
Or Patrick Stewart moment.(The first duty is to the truth!!!)
Schulz Hears nothing and sees nothing. Apple strudel he would be there.
John Banner was also in an episode of Perry Mason.( The case of the Nine Dolls) ! ! ⭐⭐⭐
This was actually better than "The Twilight Zone"
7:14 🍺 LOL this is a German Drinking Song-back in 1990 I need one credit at UCONN to graduate with Bachelor’s so I took “German Folksongs” on Wednesday afternoons with Professor Lederer (grew up in Germany as a young man during WW II. The class was in a lecture hall and some of the crazier classmates would smuggle in beer and we would literally be drinking in the back whilst singing “Ein Prozeit.” I guess that was the best class as far as fun and I never forgot the song. RIP Professor Lederer-a fun and entertaining man who taught us the Joys of German Drinking Songs.
Knox....I was a military wife in the 70's and my husband was stationed in Augsburg, Germany and we must have hit every beer fest in the area...I remember ein swie stofa(SP).
.and the beers were served in liter mugs and the beer fraus would carry 8 mugs of beer at a time..
And one would carry around a bucket with schanopes.
It was a mark a shot.
Peppermint schanopes was the best,,!!!!Lived in Augsburg 72 to 75.Then Berlin 76 to 78.
Great times!!!!
Klink finally got sent to the front
From the Luftwaffe to the Kriegsmarine...