Arrow To The Heart (BBC 1952, Robert Harris, Howard Lang)

Arrow To The Heart was a second world war drama set in the Ukraine, January 1943; A German padre spends an evening talking to a deserter who is due to be shot the next day and finds out about the man’s family history, this contrasts with the officer with whom the Padre shares a billet, Captain Brentano, who is due to be shipped off to the Stalingrad front line, where he too will face certain death.

Like many of the drams that were broadcast live in the early days of TV this production was mounted again 4 days later, Thursday 24 July. Never filmed there are no copies of this production in existence of course. Four years later (22 April 1956) Cartier restaged the piece for Sunday Night Theatre (again BBC) Robert Harris and Martin Starkie reprised their roles.

production details
UK / BBC / 1×98 minutes / Sunday 20 July 1952 @ 9.00pm black and white

Writer, producer: Rudolph Cartier (his very first production for the BBC) / Additional dialogue by Nigel Kneale (Kneale was the BBC’s only staff writer at the time) / Novella: Albrecht Goes / Associate Producer: Douglas Moodie

cast
Robert Harris as The Padre
Howard Lang as The Courier-Pilot
Esmond Knight as Major Kartuschke, Legal Officer
Leonard White as Lieutenant Ernst
Donald Pleasence as The Corporal in charge of the Officers Transit Billet
Michael Brennan as Sergeant-Major Mascher, guard at the military prison
Martin Starkie as Private Baranowski
William Devlin as The General, Commander in Chief of the German forces in the Ukraine
Hugh Kelly as Captain Brentano
Cita Crichton as Sister Melanie (Geoffrey Bayldon had a non speaking role in the production)

Head of film reviews at The Viewers Guide with an erudite, insightful, slightly sardonic, deep appreciation for classic cinema. Has a habit of quoting obscure lines from old films in everyday conversation. He keeps a meticulously organized film logbook. He's a bit of a tea snob.