It wasn't me!
And it's not a real Heinkel at all, it's a lovingly done movie prop for this film here, discarded (the Heinkel, not the film) after it was shot (the film, not the Heinkel):
Based on a true story of a German Heinkel 111 bomber pilot and an English naval observer Blackburn Skua
pilot (Luftwaffe played by German actors, Royal Fleet Airmen by English ones) first embroiled in a dog fight against each other who then both had to crash land in the deep freeze Norwegian wilderness (close to that hotel which retained the prop Heinkel) and actually had to work and live together to survive. The two pilots became friends, visiting each other after the war, the Englishman, Captain Partridge,
passing (of natural causes I hasten to add) in 1990, the German pilot, Horst Schopis (second from left, Partridge is beside him)
still alive today (a guest during the filming along with the English pilot's son) and 98 years old.
All in ze spirit of Völkerfreundschaft of course! That is both of them together with Mrs Partridge in 1977 when Schopis visited the Partridges for the first time:
Herr Partridge in the Fleet Air Arm Museum where his salvaged Blackburn Skua (which force-landed on ice and then sunk in the spring of 1940 to be retrieved in the mid-seventies and put on display as it looked on the bottom of the lake).
The real Heinkel in 1940
and what was left of it in 2002, it is in too difficult territory to salvage