The Captive Heart
I bought this poster originally to use as a source for paper infill. I'm now going to separate it into 5 pieces to practice linenbacking it in prep to backing Blazing Sixes (which is in 5 pieces as well). Unfortunately I don't know which mailer it's in-so I went to EMP to see what the date sold was to try to locate it in my poster lair mess.
I found a really cool variety of poster images for what I thought was a mild love story; as my Aussie 1 Sht seemed to imply. I think the other posters from a variety of countries are very cool.
My Aussie 1 Sht

Aussie Daybill----just great colors!

Canadian 1

French Med

US Insert R53

Spanish 1 Sht

Danish

US 1Sht

Japanese B3- might be the coolest design.

I found a really cool variety of poster images for what I thought was a mild love story; as my Aussie 1 Sht seemed to imply. I think the other posters from a variety of countries are very cool.
My Aussie 1 Sht

Aussie Daybill----just great colors!

Canadian 1

French Med

US Insert R53

Spanish 1 Sht

Danish

US 1Sht

Japanese B3- might be the coolest design.

0
Comments
For these U.K. DVD & VHS covers the distributors decided to promote the War aspect of the film.
"The Captive Heart, the 1946 (released in the U.S. in 1947) Basil Dearden
English World War II (WWII) military prisoner P.O.W. melodrama ("Would
you forge love letters to save your life?"; "The Strangest Love Story
Ever Told..."; "He forged love letters - to save his life!"; about a
group of British prisoners of war in a POW camp in Germany in World War
II, and one of them is an impostor, who is actually a Czech
concentration camp escapee, who is impersonating a British officer, and
he is sought by the Gestapo; the impostor must write to his "wife", who
he has never met, of course, and he is constantly fearful of being
discovered and being returned to a concentration camp) starring Michael Redgrave, Mervyn Johns, Gordon Jackson, Jimmy Hanley, Rachel Kempson, Basil Radford, Jack Warner,
Guy Middleton, and Jane Barrett.
Note that this movie was made right
after World War II, and most of it was filmed in Germany, in a
reconstructed POW camp. It is the first movie made about World War II prisoners of war! In the movie, the impostor is only identified
as being Czech, but because he was in a concentration camp, one wonders
if he wasn't also Jewish, although that is not specified in the movie."
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Good stuff, Bruce. I'd never read your site's review of the movie, makes me want to find the movie & watch it.
Very interesting that it was filmed in German so soon after the war was over!