Don't Ask My Heart | |
Director: | Paul Martin |
Studio: | Apollo-Film |
Runtime: | 100 minutes |
Country: | West Germany |
Language: | German |
Don't Ask My Heart (German: '''Mein Herz darfst du nicht fragen''') is a 1952 West German drama film directed by Paul Martin and starring Willy Birgel, Heidemarie Hatheyer and Maria Holst.[1] It was shot at the Tempelhof Studios in West Berlin. The film's sets were designed by the art directors Hans Jürgen Kiebach and Gabriel Pellon
In 1945 following the Soviet Union's capture and annexation of East Prussia, Anna Lohmann and her young son flee with other refugees but become separated in the turmoil. He is adopted by an aristocrat couple who raise him under the name Peter on their estate. After three years in displaced persons camps Anna gets a job at the estate where she recognises her son. However, in a court case she is unable to prove he is her son, as the now five year-old has no memory of her.
Desperate, Anna kidnaps her son and takes him to Hamburg. As he grows ill from the hardships they have to endure, she begins to question whether taking him away from his adoptive parents was the right decision.