The dream ship: Sydney
Movie | |
---|---|
Original title | The dream ship: Sydney |
Country of production | Germany |
original language | German |
Publishing year | 1996 |
length | 95 minutes |
Rod | |
Director | Christine Kabisch |
script | Axel Plogstedt |
music |
Robert Schulte Hemming James Last (title music) |
camera | Michael Steinke |
cut | Heidrun Britta Thomas |
occupation | |
|
The Dream Ship: Sydney is a German feature film by Christine Kabisch from 1996.
action
The Berlin goes to Sydney . Various guests go on board:
Andreas Sessler is the new masseur on board. He has been blind for five years following an accident. The cause of the accident was Lisa, the girlfriend of his best friend Christian. After the accident, Christian took care of Andreas for a while, but then disappeared without a trace. Now he is also on board the Berlin with Lisa , as he will accompany the trip as an on-board photographer. He happens to meet Andreas, who is happy to have met him again. Christian is plagued by feelings of guilt that Andreas doesn't want to know about, as Lisa was the one who once sat at the wheel of the car that hit Andreas. Christian can't manage to confess to Andreas that he's still with Lisa. Andreas and Christian disembark in Sydney because Andreas wants to find the Aborigines in the jungle. Lisa, tired of the game of hide-and-seek, also gets into the jeep that has an accident. Lisa is injured and has a high fever. Andreas and Christian manage to take them to the next Aboriginal village, from where the three are picked up by helicopter. A short time later, Andreas finds out that it was not Lisa but Christian who was behind the wheel of the car. Since Andreas cannot forgive him, Christian tries to kill himself. Lisa is with him when he wakes up.
The married couple Peter and Ulrike Kelling went on board with their children Susanne and Moritz. Without knowing the children, the parents have drifted apart. When Peter forbids Ulrike to take up a job again, her decision to get a divorce is finally made, especially since Peter makes it difficult for her with his closed manner. Susanne and Moritz learn of their intentions to separate and hide in Sydney on board a historic sailing boat, which promptly casts off. On board is Joachim Fuchsberger , who is on filming for two days. He finds the stowaways and informs the parents. Because of the concern for the children and Peter's insight that he shouldn't hide his feelings from his wife, they end up together again.
Annemarie Kruse and her husband Hilmar, a senior teacher, also went on board. He makes her life difficult with his quarreling and know-it-all. Annemarie speaks to head hostess Beatrice that school is the only phase in which she is safe from her husband's teachings. He receives the message on board that his application for early retirement has been approved, so that from now on he can always be around Annemarie. It promptly collapses. Beatrice knows what to do: Annemarie pretends to have suffered a memory loss in the course of the breakdown. Ship's doctor Dr. Horst Schröder advises Hilmar to rebuild the relationship. Annemarie can now quickly make it clear if her husband's behavior does not suit her. In the end, they both fall in love again, just like they did when they first met.
production
The Dream Ship: Sydney was the 27th episode in the series The Dream Ship . The film was shot in 1995 in Sydney and the surrounding area. Nuscha de Archer created the costumes . The film ran for the first time on January 7, 1996 on ZDF on German television. In December 2011, the film was released on DVD as part of an anniversary box on the occasion of 30 years of Das Traumschiff . Sydney was again the scene of the series in 2000 in the dream ship episode Olympia 2000 .
On the occasion of Joachim Fuchsberger's death, ZDF changed its program on September 13, 2014 and broadcast the Sydney Dream Ship episode .
Web links
- The Love Boat: Sydney at the Internet Movie Database (English)
- The dream ship: Sydney on traumschiff.zdf.de
Individual evidence
- ^ Fuchsberger on television . In: Stuttgarter Nachrichten , September 12, 2014, p. 3.