Everything that is right - the Italian variant

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Episode in the series Everything that is right
Original title The Italian variant
Country of production Germany
original language German
length 90 minutes
classification Episode 2 ( list )
First broadcast January 13, 2011 on Das Erste
Rod
Director Peter Gersina
script Ulli Stephan
Hermann Kirchmann
production Hermann Kirchmann, Filmpool
music Curt Cress
Chris Weller
camera Michael Boxrucker
cut Marco Pav d'Auria
occupation
chronology

←  Predecessor
Everything that is right

Successor  →
Everything that is right - fathers, daughters, sons

Everything that is right - The Italian version is the second part of the German television film series Everything that is right . The focus of the comedy is the judge Dr. Lena Kalbach ( Michaela May ), who continues to master work and private life in the Hessian city of Fulda. The film was broadcast for the first time on May 7, 2009 at 8:15 pm in Das Erste and has since been repeated in the regional programs of ARD. The first broadcast of the second part saw 4.1 million television viewers.

action

The film ties in seamlessly with the first part. Judge Dr. Lena Kalbach has got used to Fulda well after her transfer from Frankfurt am Main. So she continues to live in the same house with her daughter Nike, even if there is, as usual, tension between the two.

With the court director Dr. Kästle has nothing but sympathy for Lena. He wants to get rid of Lena. This encourages Lena to stay at the Fulda District Court. In a new case she has to declare the eviction action brought by the building magnate Canninenberg against the single-parent shopkeeper Christine Schrunz to be legal; her own sense of justice demands a different verdict, especially since she is sitting across from the shrewd lawyer Teddy Klein, who has brought her to Fulda as a punishment. Lena, however, cannot decide otherwise legally and so Antonio Malvati, Christine Schrunz's friend, takes the matter into his hands. He is Italian and fights the building magnate with Italian methods. He knows that you can only fight fraudsters with fraud. He relieved Canninenberg by one hundred thousand euros so that his girlfriend could set up a new shop. Canninenberg tried to sue Antonio Malvati immediately, but failed because of the lack of evidence.

Meanwhile, Teddy Klein is not only flirting with Lena, but is also increasingly using his seductive skills with Lena's daughter Nike. Lena observes this with concern, because obviously his efforts to win the favor of the two are only a means to an end, in order to obtain possible advantages from his clients.

production

The television film is another filmpool production on behalf of ARD Degeto . The television film was shot from July 2 to 31, 2008 in Cologne and in the baroque city of Fulda and the surrounding area.

Sequels

The third part, which under the working title Everything what is right - fathers was shot in the summer of 2009, came on January 13, 2011 at 20:15 in the first now under the title Everything what is right - fathers, daughters, sons to First broadcast.

Finally, the fourth part was filmed in the summer of 2010 with the title Everything that is right - To be or not to be and shown on January 20, 2011 at 8:15 pm in Das Erste .

The second episode reached 4.2 million viewers. In January 2011 episode three out of 3.7 million was seen, a week later the fourth part reached 4.5 million viewers. Because the audience ratings were below the station's average, the series was discontinued.

Reviews

The reviews of this comedy are again quite muted. Rainer Tittelbach from tittelbach.tv writes: “The second episode of the loose ARD series“ Everything that is right ”was about mothers and daughters, windy charmers, likeable crooks and nasty traders. The basic idea: an old 68er sweeps through Fulda with a fresh broom and smart high-heeled shoes in the fight against faint-heartedness and conventions. [It is] well-groomed entertainment of the bearable kind, [but] next time not only air out the gowns, but also pump more fresh air into the action patterns! "

At Kino.de one is of the opinion that the combination of mother and daughter always has "amusing potential." And]. [...] that the role of Carla for the second film was taken over by the excellent young Anna Hausburg, [...] is without question another win for the film. [...] Even if Michaela May's skirts are clearly too short and the processes sometimes degenerate into farce: The range's potential [...] is far from being exhausted. "

The critics of the TV magazine TV-Spielfilm judge this second TV family comedy with Michaela May quite soberly: "High court meets low standards."

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Date of first broadcast on fernsehserien.de, accessed on February 19, 2014.
  2. ↑ Broadcast dates on fernsehserien.de, on February 19, 2014.
  3. ^ Fuldaer Zeitung : Fulda-Film: Great pictures, thin story ( Memento from May 11, 2009 in the Internet Archive )
  4. See the subpages at Filmpool
  5. Shooting days on osthessen-news.de, accessed on December 19, 2013.
  6. Everything that is right: fathers, daughters, sons. G + J Entertainment Media , accessed on January 24, 2011 (ARD press release).
  7. Fuldaer Zeitung: Off for "Alles was Recht ist": ARD ends the series ( Memento from January 30, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
  8. Rainer Tittelbach Not only the gowns but also the dramaturgy should have been aired better! on tittelbach.tv, accessed on February 19, 2014.
  9. Film review of Alles was Rechts ist - The Italian version on kino.de, accessed on February 19, 2014.
  10. Short review on tvspielfilm.de, accessed on February 19, 2014.