Bloch: The anger

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Episode in the Bloch series
Original title The fury
Bloch Logo.PNG
Country of production Germany
original language German
length 90 minutes
classification Episode 9 ( list )
First broadcast July 12, 2006 on Das Erste
Rod
Director Christoph Stark
script Jochen Bitzer
production Uwe Franke ,
Sabine Tettenborn
music Thomas Osterhoff
camera Ralf Nowak
cut Olga Barthel
occupation
chronology

←  Predecessor
My daughter's boyfriend

Successor  →
The man in the tuxedo

Die Wut is a German television film by Christoph Stark from 2006 . It is the ninth episode of the Bloch television series .

Maximilian Bloch involuntarily gets to know a young patient and her problematic family structure. Again a soul calls for help because his patient lies, steals and provokes her fellow human beings.

action

Bloch has returned to Clara in Baden-Baden . While he is looking around the city and lingering at a chicken grill, he is being robbed on the street. Fifteen-year-old Sonja seems to be very used to it, because she is so skillful that Bloch does not immediately notice the loss of his wallet. The therapist unexpectedly meets the thief again, can involve her in a conversation and thus approach her. Meekly, she gives him back his wallet and tells him nasty lies. Allegedly she came from a broken background, grew up in the home and doesn't know where to stay. Bloch quickly notices that this is not true and wants to find out what is behind it. He lets Sonja spend the night with Clara and himself, with Sonja secretly helping herself in Clara's jewelry box and then disappearing again.

The next day, an old friend of Bloch's appears unannounced. Since he has private problems, he fled to him and stayed for a few days. He has to watch Clara notice the loss of her family jewelry. She is very upset about the theft and Bloch asks his friend Reinhard to take care of Clara a little until he has found the jewelry and the girl again.

Bloch had secretly looked at Sonja's identity card and found out her address. He goes to her parents and her father is very surprised that his daughter is said to have talked to a therapist. He is just as dismissive as his daughter, and Bloch leaves without having achieved anything. His own daughter is waiting for him at home and wants to explain to him that she would like to interrupt her psychology studies for a music career. Before Bloch can talk her out of it, Sonja's mother calls and asks him to help find her daughter. She knows how problematic she is and also that she steals. Sonja has a younger sister with whom she gets along well. Bloch gets to know Julia and is sure that she knows where her sister is. Reluctantly, Julia gives a hint and Bloch finds Sonja with her friend Boris. From there he takes her with him and Clara, where Sonja at first only "bites around" and doesn't even notice that someone means well with her. Sonja is so full of anger that is even directed against herself. She slams through a glass door with both hands and is seriously injured. Bloch is at a loss, because with the high level of social skills in her parents' home, everything should actually be fine. So he goes back to the Baumgärtner's and finds the first clue why Sonja is waging a "war" against her parents. In conversation with the parents and Sonja, it turns out that Sonja was adopted at 18 months. This makes it clear to her why she always had the feeling that she did not fit in with her parents at all. Sonja becomes noticeably calm and looks satisfied. Her parents, on the other hand, get into an argument because they planned never to tell Sonja. They wanted to let her grow up unencumbered without the knowledge of having a mother from whom the youth welfare office had to take her child away.

Sonja decides to leave her parents' house to find her birth mother. Since she cannot do it alone, she asks Bloch for help. She goes to him and also brings Clara's jewelry back. The fact that Bloch's friend Reinhardt is a public prosecutor makes the search easier. But the result is not very positive, because Sonja's mother was in prison and died six months ago of a drug overdose. The realization that Sonja's mother didn't want her and that she almost starved as a baby is still difficult for her. Thanks to Bloch's consistent support, she gradually succeeds in accepting her current family as hers.

background

Die Wut is a co-production by Südwestfunk and Westdeutscher Rundfunk and was shot together with Maran Film from September 27, 2005 to October 29, 2005 in Baden-Baden and Stuttgart . The film was created based on a concept by Peter Märthesheimer and Pea Fröhlich and was broadcast for the first time in prime time on July 12, 2006 as part of the ARD series “FilmWittwoch im Erste ” .

reception

Audience rating

The film was seen by 3.67 million viewers when it was first broadcast on July 12, 2006, corresponding to a market share of 14.8 percent.

Reviews

Rainer Tittelbach from tittelbach.tv notes with approval: “'Die Wut' is a typical 'Bloch': psychologically coherent, wonderfully played & Janina Stopper is a discovery!” Tittelbach continues: Bloch “recognizes the limits of the mind and penetrates into the realm of repressed feelings. It's painful because barriers break, but it's the only way to recovery. It's nice that Bloch can help others, but is not a superhuman when it comes to his own soul. So an old friend drives him into mad jealousy. "

Tilmann P. Gangloff from Kino.de says about this film: “Unlike in the scripts of the late Peter Märthesheimer, in which Bloch was always a person with two faces, the fat analyst gets off better with author Jochen Bitzer: He doesn't just believe of the good in people, they also embody it. […] Janina Stopper, who is directed with great sensitivity by director Christoph Stark, is sensational: Sonja's pure provocation never looks acted; even their cynicism seems authentic. The young actress embodies the war against her parents with a frightening intensity. A comparison with the young Isabelle Huppert is anything but far-fetched. "

Also , the Morgenpost writes equally positive: "Bloch: The Rage is a great narrated psychodrama - played intense and set sensitively staged by director Christoph Stark."

The TV feature film , awarded the film the best possible rating (thumbs up) and wrote: "Bloch's ninth case shows the vulnerable, thicknesses' as one of its other hit series was, at its best: patient, interested, compassionate. In the end, a real horror picture emerges: a family in which the silence has been perfected. ”Conclusion:“ Strong dive into the depths of the soul. ”

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Bloch: The anger at crew united
  2. Bloch: Die Wut audience rating at maranfilm.de, accessed on December 14, 2014.
  3. ^ Rainer Tittelbach : Bloch: Die Wut Filmkritik at tittelbach.tv, accessed on December 14, 2014.
  4. Tilmann P. Gangloff : Bloch: Die Wut Filmkritik at kino.de, accessed on December 14, 2014.
  5. Bloch: Die Wut Filmkritik at morgenpost.de, accessed on December 14, 2014.
  6. Bloch: Die Wut short review at tvspielfilm.de, accessed on December 14, 2014.