The film, which casts the German actor Ulrich Turkur as Rommel, has yet to be shown on television. But it has already provoked an angry response from Rommel's 82-year-old son, Manfred, his daughter-in-law and his grandchildren.
In letters to SWR, the family complains that all the advance publicity about the film ignores the chivalrous side of the general and portrays Rommel as "an upstart, a favourite of Hitler and as a Nazi war criminal".
"This is simply untrue. These are lies," the family insists in its letter to the channel's director-general, Peter Boudgoust. "Yes, he did value Hitler in the beginning because he was a friend of the army but the mutual admiration ended abruptly with Hitler's 'victory or death' order before El Alamein which resulted in Rommel withdrawing his troops of his own accord and saving many lives."
SWR is reported to have been holding talks with Rommel's granddaughter, Catherine, about the film. However, SWR has since allowed the script to be examined by a group of prominent historians and military experts. They have praised it for its precision and the "care" taken by the director in his use of dialogue and scene-setting.
The SWR production is the latest attempt by German film-makers to provide a realistic assessment of Rommel. A television documentary on the general aired by the ZDF public broadcasting channel four years ago claimed to have exposed the "myth" that Rommel fought a clean war in the North African desert.
Entitled Rommel's War, the documentary claimed that he played a key role in Hitler's attempt to export the Nazi Holocaust to the Middle East. It revealed that the SS had orders to "destroy Jewry in the Arab World" and had set up special "Sonderkommando" extermination units to follow in the wake of the Afrika Korps.
"With his victories, Rommel was simply preparing the way for the Nazi extermination machine," insisted the documentary's author, historian Jorg Mullner. But post-war Germany cherished the notion of the chivalrous "Desert Fox". In 1970, the then West German Navy had no qualms about naming a destroyer after him.
- Independent