Ferienheim Bergkristall: May makes everything new

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Movie
Original title May makes everything new
Country of production GDR
original language German
Publishing year 1989
Age rating FSK from 0
Rod
Director Hans-Joachim Preil
script Hans-Joachim Preil
production Television of the GDR
music Rudi Werion
camera Lothar Noske
cut Rosemarie Fuhs
occupation

May makes everything new is the sixth and final variation in the Bergkristall holiday home series from 1989 . It was broadcast for the first time on December 29, 1989 on the first program of East German television.

action

The Bergkristall holiday home under the management of Helmut Oberpichler is being reconstructed. The reconstruction work, led by construction manager Paul May, is nearing completion, but the question arises whether the planned handover date on January 6th can be kept when all the craftsmen go home over New Year's Eve. When the well-known GDR singer Peter Wieland broke down with his Lada near the holiday home, Hugo Stieglitz had the idea of ​​stopping him so that he could stay in the holiday home for the Silverster Festival. So the craftsmen also have a reason not to go back to their families, but to bring their relatives to the Bergkristall holiday home to celebrate New Year's Eve with Peter Wieland. In this way, the handover date can also be met, especially since the mayor and local council as well as the 10th grade of the Bergkristall secondary school, which Robert Wachtel attends, are available for the remaining cleanup work.

At the end, Alois Wachtel and Hugo Stieglitz prepare a reconciliation drink with devastating consequences.

Further information

Due to a lengthy illness of the screenwriter Hans-Joachim Preil , the episode planned for 1988 could not be created until 1989. In contrast to the five previous episodes, the recording no longer took place in the Kulturhaus in Zinnowitz , but in Bitterfeld immediately after the fall of the Berlin Wall , to which it occasionally referred to in terms of content (for example, when rooms were named Wendehals , etc.).

Web links