Don't Look Back, My Son (Serbo-Croatian: Ne okreći se, sine), also known as My Son, Don't Turn Round in the United States, is a 1956 Yugoslav film by Croatian director Branko Bauer.
It is based on a children's novel of the same name by Arsen Diklić.
Don't Look Back, My Son | |
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Ne okreći se, sine | |
Directed by | Branko Bauer |
Written by | Branko Bauer Arsen Diklić |
Starring | Bert Sotlar Zlatko Lukman |
Cinematography | Branko Blažina |
Edited by | Boris Tešija |
Music by | Bojan Adamič |
Production company | |
Release date | 16 July 1956 |
Running time | 111 minutes |
Country | Yugoslavia |
Language | Serbo-Croatian |
In 1999, a poll of Croatian film critics found it to be the eighth greatest Croatian film ever made.
During World War II, engineer Neven Novak, a member of the illegal partisan resistance, escapes from a train with which the Ustashe are transporting prisoners to Jasenovac. After a successful escape, he tries to rescue his son Zoran, a boy who has been indoctrinated into Ustasha and Nazi-fascist ideology, from the Ustasha children's home in Zagreb. When Zoran learns that his father is an enemy of the regime, he refuses to flee with him to partisan territory. Novak is faced with his son's resistance and increased pressure that the police and agents are placing on him.
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