Dr. Hart's Diary
| Dr. Hart's Diary | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Paul Leni | 
| Written by | Hans Brenner | 
| Produced by | Paul Davidson | 
| Starring | |
| Cinematography | Carl Hoffmann | 
Production company  | |
| Distributed by | PAGU | 
Release date  | 
  | 
Running time  | 82 minutes | 
| Country | Germany | 
| Languages | Silent  German intertitles  | 
Dr. Hart's Diary (German: Das Tagebuch des Dr. Hart) is a 1917 German silent war film directed by Paul Leni and starring Heinrich Schroth, Käthe Haack and Dagny Servaes. The film depicts a German field hospital in occupied Russian Poland during the ongoing First World War.
The film was created as part of a major effort to propagandize the German-Polish friendship that leads to the re-establishment of Poland by German forces in late 1916. It was produced by Paul Davidson's PAGU in association with the propaganda agency BUFA. Shortly afterwards, hoping to produce a number of similar films, the German government founded UFA which PAGU merged into.[1]
Cast
- Heinrich Schroth as Dr. Robert Hart
 - Käthe Haack as Schlossherrin Ursula von Hohenau
 - Dagny Servaes as Jadwiga Bransky
 - Ernst Hofmann as Graf Bronislaw Krascinsky
 - Adolf Klein as Graf Bransky
 
References
- ^ Prawer p.4
 
Bibliography
- Prawer, S.S. Between Two Worlds: The Jewish Presence in German and Austrian Film, 1910-1933. Berghahn Books, 2005.
 
External links