{{Short description|1947 film}} {{use dmy dates|date=December 2019}} {{Infobox film | name =And If We Should Meet Again | image =And If We Should Meet Again (film).jpg | caption = | director = [[Hans Müller (director)|Hans Müller]] | producer = {{ubl|[[Helmuth Schönnenbeck]]|[[Peter Wehrand]]}} | writer = {{ubl|[[Hertha von Gebhardt]] (novel)|[[Ernst Hasselbach]]}} | narrator = | starring = {{ubl|[[Paul Dahlke (actor)|Paul Dahlke]]|[[Käthe Haack]]|[[Willi Rose]]}} | music = [[Michael Jary]] | cinematography = [[Klaus von Rautenfeld]] | editing = [[Anneliese Schönnenbeck]] | studio = Studio 45-Film | distributor = [[Herzog Film]] | released = {{film date|1947|12|2|df=y}} | runtime = 92 minutes | country = Germany | language = [[German language|German]] | budget = | gross = }} '''''And If We Should Meet Again''''' ({{langx|de|'''Und finden dereinst wir uns wieder'''}}) is a 1947 German [[drama film]] directed by [[Hans Müller (director)|Hans Müller]] and starring [[Paul Dahlke (actor)|Paul Dahlke]], [[Käthe Haack]] and [[Willi Rose]].<ref>Rentschler p. 345</ref> It was part of the post-war group of [[Rubble film]]s. It was shot at the [[Tempelhof Studios]] in [[Berlin]] and [[location shooting|on location]] around [[Lüdenscheid]] and at [[Altena Castle]]. The film's sets were designed by the [[art director]] Gerhard Ladner.
==Synopsis== In the final days of the [[Second World War]], five boys evacuated to [[Westphalia]] want to travel to [[Berlin]] to defend the capital from [[Allies (World War II)|Allied forces]]. Gradually they become more disillusioned by the war and their faith in the [[Nazi regime]] is broken. Gehlhorn, an older soldier, becomes an effective father figure to them and helps them survive the fighting.
==Cast== {{cast listing| * [[Paul Dahlke (actor)|Paul Dahlke]] as Studienrat Bockendahl * [[Helmut Heyne]] as Assessor Hoefert * [[Kurt Langanke]] as Assessor Paulke * [[Käthe Haack]] as Wolfgang's Mother * [[Willi Rose]] as Gefreiter Gehlhorn * [[Lutz Moik]] as Wolfgang * [[Hans Neie]] as Manfred * [[Horst Gentzen]] as Max * [[Dieter Bauer]] as Ulli * [[Kaspar Brüninghaus]] as Ortsbauernfüher * [[Hermann Düwell]] * Morchen as Der Hund * [[Carl Raddatz]] as Narrator * [[Gunther Seehaus]] as Erich }}
== References == {{reflist}}
==Bibliography== * {{cite book | editor-last = Rentschler | editor-first = Eric | title = German Film and Literature: Adaptations and Transformations | publisher = Routledge | year = 2013 | isbn = 978-1-136-36873-8 }}
== External links == * {{IMDb title|0136584}}
[[Category:1947 films]] [[Category:West German films]] [[Category:1947 German-language films]] [[Category:Films directed by Hans Müller]] [[Category:West German black-and-white films]] [[Category:German drama films]] [[Category:1947 drama films]] [[Category:1947 German films]] [[Category:Films shot at Tempelhof Studios]] [[Category:Films scored by Michael Jary]] [[Category:German-language drama films]]
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