Go take off your dirndl

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Movie
Original title Go take off your dirndl
Country of production Germany
original language German
Publishing year 1973
length 80 minutes
Age rating FSK 18
Rod
Director Sigi Rothemund
(as Siggi Götz )
script Erich Tomek
(as Florian Burg )
production Karl Spiehs
music Gerhard Heinz
camera Werner Kurz
cut Eva Zeyn
occupation

Go, take off your dirndl is a German sex film fun play made in 1973 by Siggi Götz .

action

In keeping with the tradition of the alpine, yodel and lederhosen films that were popular in the 1970s, the action also focuses on permanently horny Bavarians, a newcomer from Berlin and a somewhat idle Italian. The men primarily run after half to completely naked maids and girls and do it happily and at any time of the day or night in the hay, on the Oktoberfest and the hayloft with, under and on top of one another. The framework for action is correspondingly thin: The "suckling girl" Gisela Horn, who is completely unaffected by country life, has acquired a farm in deepest Bavaria in order to be able to breathe the "clean country air". But from the start she's been nagging around, starting with her complaint about a fresh, steaming pile of dung right outside her front door. Your servant, the bearded Hias, a native in the classic Seppel look, cannot understand your objections at all, as it has always been like that in this country. While Mrs. Horn now demands custom and morality, her employees Toni and Zenzi do it in the cowshed next door.

Meanwhile in Italy. The distinguished Conte Traverso wants to send his two daughters on a language and educational trip to Germany. As a chaperon he has chosen the allegedly gay Vittorio Parmesano, who, however, is in truth an outspoken womanizer. The three of them promptly land in the deepest part of Bavaria, as the Italian chauffeur, who is actually gay, only has eyes for Vittorio while driving and then wrecks the car. Everyone is stranded in the Bavarian no man's land. When Vittorio inspects his guest house room, a local couple has just disappeared from the still warm and stained bed. While the landlord examines the bed critically and is surprised that it seems to have already been used, Parmesano picks up on the blonde employee Resi, who, like her lover, found it difficult to hide in the room. One of Count Traverso's two daughters is also delighted when she discovers Resis hid in the farmer's cupboard in the room, who is no less naked. And so the Italian guests soon take part in the copulation-laden love dance.

Finally Gisela's brother, the rather stiff bark beetle researcher Heino, arrives with his companion Lore from Berlin. He, who until now only had his crawling animals in mind, will soon be convinced that other hobbies can also be pursued on the alpine pasture ... for example driving a tractor. Because once he has gotten up and started he can no longer bring the monster to a standstill and dashes through the alpine meadows and the cattle sheds. At the following village festival with a hearty Schuhplattler insert, every Gaudibursch will find his maid: Toni his Zenzi, Hias his Berlin new farmer, the Italian daughters as well as Parmesano, who has just been released from his supervisory function, who immediately claws a buxom Bajuwarin, whom he is stark naked in Finds a lotter bed in a guest room. Even the stiff bark beetle man can no longer escape the feminine charms of his cart. Before that, however, it says “Go, take off your dirndl!”.

Production notes

Producer Karl Spiehs ventured into the genre of the lederhosen sex comedy for the first time . The film wasn't the first of its kind, but it started a new wave. Go, take off your dirndl was also the first film director of the 29-year-old Sigi Rothemund, who had been working as an assistant director until then and was still operating here as "Siggi Götz". The film was shot in the summer of 1973 in the Bavarian foothills of the Alps. The world premiere took place on October 19, 1973.

Erich Tomek was in charge of production. Robert Fabiankovich took care of the equipment, Lilo Nöbauer created the costumes. Rolf Schmidt-Gentner was responsible for the sound.

criticism

“The sexual goings-on of a north German farmer, her servants and her friends in a Bavarian village. Uninhibited pornography that only uses the most vulgar means in image and dialogue. "

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Roman Schliesser: The super nose. Karl Spiehs and his films , Verlag Carl Ueberreuter, Vienna 2006, p. 121
  2. Go, take off your dirndl. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed March 2, 2017 .Template: LdiF / Maintenance / Access used