Dr. Fummel and his playmates

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Movie
Original title Dr. Fummel and his playmates
Country of production Germany
original language German
Publishing year 1970
length 88 minutes
Age rating FSK 18
Rod
Director Atze Glanert
script Walter Hämmerli (these are Alois Brummer and Pierre O. Pistek )
production Alois Brummer
music Walter Geiger
camera Atze Glanert
cut Inge Martin
occupation

and Alois Brummer, Doris Arden , Sissy Engl , Rita Weinberg , Ruth Witt

Dr. Fummel and his playmates is an early German sex film fun game. Alois Brummer produced it in 1969, even before the start of the schoolgirl report sex film wave.

action

Mr. Blümlein is a slightly idiot retailer from the Bavarian province. Because his intervertebral disc troubles him, his wife Rosa puts him on the train and sends him on cure. During the transfer stay in Munich he visits the "Annette massage parlor". The ladies for very special massages do not explain his mistake at first. The masseuse Lisa takes Mr. Blümlein and his checkbook to her home for a well-paid lunchtime. Salon manager Annette and her playmates, known as "the Count", do not like their girls' extra income.

The company's regular customers include Rasputin and Dr. Fummel, a passionate voyeur . The Italian Hugo wants to get his girlfriend into position with the count and gives her striptease lessons with ardor. Meanwhile, the count is personally inspecting two new girls.

After all, all of illustrious society has a sex party outside of town. Mr. Blümlein fears the arrival of his quarrelsome wife and follows Lisa into the country. He doesn't like the wild goings-on, unlike Dr. Fummel, crouching in a tree in front of the window and watching everything through binoculars. A stout transvestite ensnares the butler . When Blümlein finally sits on the rescue train home, he is completely exhausted.

Production notes

Dr. Fummel and his playmates was filmed from September 22, 1969 in Munich-Pasing (in Alois Brummer's house), Memmingen , Kufstein , Freilassing and Ulm . The film passed the FSK on March 11, 1970 and was premiered on April 14, 1970 at the Gabriel Filmtheater in Munich.

The film was put on the list of media harmful to minors by the Federal Testing Office for Media Harmful to Young People with decision No. 2938 of July 7, 1986 , and was only removed from the list again with decision No. 9158 of March 18, 2010.

Reviews

“The nicest thing in this film is the St. Bernard dog, which unfortunately only appears for a short time. There is a lot of laughter on the screen! The viewer lost their happy mood. The encouraging sex scenes that weren't saved on didn't help either. With the thick gestures, the blissful days of silent films returned. "

- Hamburger Abendblatt dated June 6, 1970

"Unbelievably primitive clothes specially made for voyeurs."

In Films 1965-70 the following can be read: "Humor-free, shoddy clothes without any sense of the limits of taste."

Individual evidence

  1. Evangelical Press Association, Munich, Review No. 181/1970.
  2. ^ Films 1965/70. Handbook VIII of the Catholic film criticism. Volume 1. Cologne 1971, p. 62

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