Friesland: Klootschießen

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Episode of the series Friesland
Original title Klootschießen
Country of production Germany
original language German
length 89 minutes
classification Episode 3 ( list )
German-language
first broadcast
Feb. 27, 2016 on ZDF
Rod
Director Markus Sehr
script Timo Berndt
production Sabine de Mardt
Anton Moho
music Tobias Wagner
Steven Schwalbe
camera Andreas Koehler
cut Benjamin Ikes
occupation
chronology

←  Predecessor
family secrets

Successor  →
Irrfeuer

Klootschießen is a German television film by Markus Sehr from 2016. It is the third episode in the Friesland television series .

action

During the traditional East Frisian Klootschießen , the two police officers Jens Jensen and Süher Özlügül discover a bog body. Since the deceased was likely to have been lying in the moor for over 20 years, identifying him turned out to be difficult. Commissioner Jan Brockhorst from Wilhelmshaven takes over the main investigation, in which Jensen and Özlügül interfere again and again. After detailed investigations by the pharmacist and hobby forensic specialist Insa Scherzinger, it can be assumed that it is a murder case and the great Leer football hero Hannes Jell, who went missing 20 years ago. At that time, Leer dreamed of promotion to the next league, which had been shattered by the disappearance of the hopeful Jell.

After it became known in the village who the bog body was, the population immediately accused the widow, Marlies Jell, of murder. Commissioner Brockhorst immediately takes up this hint and studies the old files in which the suspect was judged to be violent. Jensen and Özlügül talk to Marlies Jell, who tells of her husband's affair with another woman, which she would have forgiven him. Özlügül therefore considers it possible that the case could have something to do with it. After Insa Scherzinger examined the bog body again, she found a small bullet hole. To find the right projectile, she looks around at the site in the bog and is successful.

The hunt for Marlies Jell escalates when a stranger tries to shoot her in her house, but fatally hits her sister who lives with her. Jensen suspects Hauke ​​Hansbach, the stepfather of Marlis Jell and her sister Ulrike. Since the inheritance disputes after her mother's death, he's not been on good terms with either of them. Meanwhile, Özlügül is following up on a botched operation for the footballer. The attending physician, Dr. Mark Lehsoll, probably made the surgical mistake aware because his wife had started an affair with Jell and he was jealous. This motivation is dispelled by Sabine Lehsoll, as she explains that her over-ambitious ex-husband was only interested in finances. So someone must have paid a lot of money for botching the OP that Mark Lehsoll had gotten into. Jensen suspects Marlis Jell and she admits this. She wanted to ensure that her husband would stay with her and not be able to chase other women more than the great star footballer. But Jensen now has to experience how Marlis Jell becomes a murderer. She had known that her own sister had a relationship with her husband at the time, but when he wanted to come back to her, Ulrike hadn't got over it and killed Hannes. When Marlis realized this, she shot her sister and now her stepfather, who knew this and had never talked about it. When Marlis Jell in her madness now also wants to shoot Jensen and Özlügül, she can only hunt down a Klootkugel that was purposefully thrown by Wolfgang Habedank.

reception

Audience ratings

The first broadcast on February 27, 2016 reached 6.48 million viewers, which corresponds to a market share of 20.3 percent.

Reviews

Tilmann P. Gangloff wrote for tittelbach.tv and said about this episode: “The 'Friesland' films on ZDF are considered crime comedies, but 'Klootschießen' is neither exciting nor funny. The characters step on the spot, the plot is more intricate than it is, and the fact that the dead man is once again a bog corpse at the beginning doesn't make the harmless, inconspicuously staged story any more original. "

In Quotenmeter.de Sindey Schering wrote, "is worrying that the Frisians probably already run out of ideas. The ninety-minute film is about the fact that a bog body first has to be identified and then it has to be clarified who once killed the dead person. "" The Nordic-brittle joke of the predecessors gives way to a lower gag rate. The offered joke is flatter, more silly and mostly more predictable and the individually worked out inspectors are now just another, unequal smirking crime team as from countless other formats. "" Due to the exaggerated performances of the supporting actors, the outcome of this 'Friesland' episode is only all too clear - all the more regrettable that not only the perpetrator question has no depth. "

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b Tilmann P. Gangloff : Florian Lukas, Sophie Dal, Theresa Underberg, Berndt, Sehr. Frisian skimmed food at tittelbach.tv , accessed on November 28, 2017.
  2. Sindey Schering: Friesland - klootschieten at Quotenmeter.de , accessed on 16 March 2018th