References in popular culture
* Legendary
softcore film director
Russ Meyer used character actor
Henry Rowland in four of his films to portray Bormann including
Beyond the Valley of the Dolls where Bormann is stabbed to death by a
transsexual while dressed in full Nazi regalia.
Supervixens (1975) and
Beneath the Valley of the Ultra-Vixens (1979) feature Boorman as a gas station owner and small town Lothario respectively and in
UP! (1978) where only his voice is heard coming from a mental institution where he is locked up with a recently
castrated Adolf Schwartz aka
Hitler.
* Bormann's photo is shown in the 1971 film
Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory and is identified as a man in South America who is the winner of the last golden ticket, a ticket that is later determined to be a forgery.
* In the
Mel Brooks movie
To Be Or Not To Be Brooks, playing Adolf Hitler, refers to Bormann singing "So I said to Martin Bormann, I said, hey Marty, why don't we throw a little nazi party?".
* In the
Philip K. Dick science fiction novel
The Man in the High Castle, Bormann is the current leader of Germany.
* In
Don Rosa's comics series
The Pertwillaby Papers (first published in 1970s, published in book form 2001, by Gazette Bok, Oslo), Bormann was in charge of hiding the art treasures the Nazis had stolen from around the Europe; he is eventually found, frozen to death, on the
North Pole.
* In the Soviet miniseries
Seventeen Moments of Spring (1973), Bormann is portrayed to play a key role in Nazi's purported separate peace talks with Western leaders, and concealing the 'party gold' after the defeat of the Nazis.
* In
Torgny Lindgren's Hash (Pölsan) (2002) (
http://www.powells.com/review/2004_12_12.html), Bormann escapes to
Sweden and attempts to integrate into the local environment of a small village. He engages school teacher Lars in the quest of finding the world's best "hash" (the translator's attempt at finding a word for Swedish "pölsa", a real and non-drug-related dish).
* In Kinshasa, Zaire, while covering the 1975
Rumble in the Jungle between
Mohammad Ali and
George Foreman for
Rolling Stone magazine,
Hunter S. Thompson had the hotel bellhop page "Martin Bormann." When Thompson left Zaire, he took with him a pair of elephant tusks that he had paid for with a traveller's check signed "Martin Bormann."
* In
Takao Saito's manga series
Golgo 13, the Israeli government hires Golgo 13 to rescue a
Mossad agent and eliminate
Neo-Nazis operating in
Argentina under the leadership of Nazi war criminal Martin Bormann.
*
Blue Öyster Cult recorded a track called
Boorman the chauffer, which appears on the re-release of the 1974
Secret Treaties album.
*
Monty Python recorded a one-off show for German TV in 1972 called
Monty Python's Fliegender Zirkus, which included several sketches about the
Olympic Games. One of these sketches includes a sprinter in a starting line-up who is described as "Bormann of Brazil." This sketch subsequently reappeared in the 1982 concert movie
Monty Python Live at the Hollywood Bowl.
* Bormann, played by actor
James Jeter, is shown as the bass player on the
Sex Pistols' 1979 song
The Biggest Blow (A Punk Prayer) in both the movie
The Great Rock and Roll Swindle and on the single's picture sleeve. The single was recorded in Brazil with
Ronnie Biggs on lead vocals, which presumably tied in with many post-war reports of Bormann's whereabouts in South America.
* In 1987, Manchester group
The Fall released a single with the song "Haf Found Bormann" as the B-side.
*Martin Bormann was impersonated twice in the episode "The Legend" of the 1966 TV show Mission Impossible. First by a mannequin being used by a Nazi to resurrect Nazism in Germany and then by Martin Landau in the character of "Master of Disguise" Rollin Hand to discredit the Nazi.
http://www.tv.com/mission-impossible/the-legend/episode/69667/recap.html
* In the 2005
Rebellion Developments game
Sniper Elite, the player is tasked to kill Bormann to prevent him from surrendering himself to Soviet agents.
*
Thomas Thieme portrayed Bormann in the 2004 German movie
Der Untergang about the last days of Hitler's life.
*
Jack Higgins wrote three novels in which Martin Bormann is featured:
The Valhalla Exchange (1976),
Thunder Point (1993), and
The Bormann Testament (2006).
* Martin Bormann is featured in the Colin Forbes novel "The Leader and the Damned" as a Russian spy
* In a 'Timequake' story from the British science fiction comic Starlord, Bormann murders and then assumes the identity of a soldier who has traveled back in time to Berlin in 1945 to study the city under siege. Bormann successfully infiltrates the organisation of Time Control and changes the outcome of WWII, placing himself as the Reich's new Führer.
* In the anime series Blood+'', he is seen only once in episode 12 as one of Diva's chevaliers. It was believed he was killed later on.