Wer ist max und wer ist moritz

Wer ist max und wer ist moritz

Ah, how oft we read or hear of
Boys we almost stand in fear of!
For example, take these stories
Of two youths, named Max and Moritz,
Who, instead of early turning
Their young minds to useful learning,
Often leered with horrid features
At their lessons and their teachers...

Max and Moritz: A Rascals' History in Seven Tricks is a German children's book of 1865, written and drawn by Wilhelm Busch. Like the rest of Busch's work, it is a combination of sequential drawings and rhyming verses and a forerunner of comic strips.

Max and Moritz, two naughty boys or should we say, young sociopaths subject the good citizens of a German town to a crossfire of cruel pranks. One after another the Widow, the Uncle, the Teacher, the Tailor, and the Baker fall prey to their rascally crimes, until the delinquents find their master in a crafty Farmer and their reign of terror comes to a surprisingly final end.

Max and Moritz was a 19th century bestseller and spawned a train of parodies, pastiches and imitations. Its probably most successful derivate are The Katzenjammer Kids.

As Max and Moritz is Wilhelm Busch's most well-known work, the most important German comics award is named after it. The Max-und-Moritz-Preis has been awarded every two years at the International Comic Salon in Erlangen since 1984.

A roller coaster ride based on the book opened at Dutch Theme Park Efteling in June 2020.

You can read it online (translation and original) here

Wer ist max und wer ist moritz
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Tropes in Max and Moritz:

  • Aesop Enforcer: The miller.
  • Animals Not to Scale: The may beetles which Max and Moritz put into Uncle Fritze's bed are drawn as big as a human hand.
    Wer ist max und wer ist moritz
  • And There Was Much Rejoicing: The villagers, after hearing the miller had ground the boys alive and the geese had eaten their remnants.
  • Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking: After Max and Moritz put gunpowder into the teacher's pipe and it explodes, the author (or Lämpel?) muses: Who shall teach the children now? Who shall multiply the knowledge? What should the teacher use for smoking now?
  • Ash Face: The teacher Master Lämpel
    Wer ist max und wer ist moritz
    ◊, after the boys have filled his pipe with gunpowder.

    When the smoke-cloud lifts and clears,
    Lämpel on his back appears;
    God be praised! still breathing there,
    Only somewhat worse for wear.
    Nose, hands, eyebrows (once like yours),
    Now are black as any Moor's;
    Burned the last thin spear of hair,
    And his pate is wholly bare.

  • Asshole Victim: The boys, in the end.
  • Cooking the Live Meal (suggested): Breaking into the bakery, Max and Moritz fall into a trough of dough and are caught by the baker, who rolls them up like two loaves of bread and shoves them into his oven to bake them. There is no definitive indication that the baker intends to eat them, but the fact that the narration describes them as "brown and good to eat" when they come out sounds rather ominous. However, apparently contrary to the baker's expectation, Max and Moritz are still alive and eat through their crusts from the inside while the baker is not looking, and run off.
  • Covered in Gunge: While breaking into the bakery, Max and Moritz fall into a trough of dough and emerge completely covered in dough.
    Wer ist max und wer ist moritz

    All enveloped now in dough,
    See them, monuments of woe.

  • Declarative Finger: The Teacher Lämpel
    Wer ist max und wer ist moritz
    ◊ is introduced with this pose.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: While the boys aren't exactly angelic, the miller murders them in cold blood by pushing them in the mill feedstock chute and grinding the boys into pellets alive.
  • Explosive Cigar: Max and Moritz maliciously stuff the teacher's meerschaum pipe with gunpowder, with predictable results (trick no. 4)
  • For the Evulz: For most of their tricks, Max and Moritz have no motives other than to cause pain and misery. Only nrs. 2 (stealing the Widow's roasted hens) and 6 (stealing the Baker's pretzels) have a material motive.
  • Get Thee to a Nunnery: Max and Moritz provoke a tailor by calling him "goat-Böck". Nowadays it just sounds like a pun on his name (well, in German). At this time though, it implied he was doing improper acts with goats.
  • Heroic Comedic Sociopath: Max and Moritz.
  • Invisible Parents: Max and Moritz' parents are never seen or mentioned.
  • Jerkass: The boys.
  • Just Desserts: Max and Moritz are ground in the mill into pellets and eaten by geese.
  • Written Sound Effect: Schnupdiwup! (snatching roast chicken with a fishing line), Rawau! (Row-wow!) (dog barking), Ritze-ratze! (sawing wood), Kracks! (Crash!) (wood breaking), Rums! (explosion), Kritze-kratze! (crawling beetles), Ratsch! (skidding through a chimney), Puff! (falling into a chest of flour), Knacks! (chair breaking), Schwapp! (falling into a trough of dough), Ruff! (shoving bread into/out of an oven), Knusper knasper! (Crispy crunchy!) (gnawing through a bread crust), Rabs! (shoving boys into a sack), Rickeracke! (Creaky cracky!) (noise of mill grinding).

Sind Max und Moritz Brüder?

Max und Moritz“ – die Geschichte zweier Brüder, die sich in sieben Taten an der Witwe Bolte, dem Schneider Böck, dem Lehrer Lämpel, ihrem Onkel Fritz, dem Bäckermeister sowie dem Bauer Mecke mit Hilfe von Streichen vergehen – bildet in diesem Zusammenhang das wohl bekannteste Werk Buschs, das vielen Lesern aus ...

Wie sind Max und Moritz gestorben?

Max und Moritz sind am Schluss tot, sie werden durch die Mühle gemahlen. Eva Weissweiler betont, dass es für Kinder, die zum Beispiel Mundraub begingen, damals tatsächlich sehr harte Strafen gab.

Was haben Max und Moritz gemacht?

Streich der Geschichte von Wilhelm Busch dringen Max und Moritz auf Witwe Boltes Hof ein und töten ihre Hühner. In jedem modernen Medium wäre eine solche Charaktervorstellung die Einführung für einen nahezu psychopathischen Antagonisten, wie man ihn in Form von Serienkillern aus Horrorfilmen und Thrillern kennt.

Ist Max und Moritz verboten?

Aktuell keine Termine. Die Lausbubengeschichten von Max und Moritz waren nicht immer unumstritten: In einigen Regionen wurden sie nach Erscheinen für Jugendliche unter 18 Jahren verboten.