Marry me

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Movie
Original title Marry me
HeirateMir FilmPoster.jpg
Country of production Germany
original language German
Publishing year 1999
length 103 minutes
Rod
Director Douglas Wolfsperger
script Klaus Gietinger
Douglas Wolfsperger
production Daniel Zuta
music Hans-Jürgen Buchner
camera Carl-Friedrich Koschnick
cut Corina Dietz
occupation

Marry me , aka My Polish Virgin , The Bride and Her Gravedigger and Marry Me! - Everyone's turn once! is a German cinema comedy by Douglas Wolfsperger from 1999 .

action

The focus of the story is Eugen Schafmayer ( Ulrich Noethen ), an inconspicuous cemetery worker who travels to Poland with some of his colleagues and other men to “buy” a wife. It was more by chance that he came across the classy Malgorzata "Goschka" Kawalerowicz ( Verona Feldbusch ) and took her to Lake Constance.

Soon after their return, some of the 'Polish drivers' gradually fell victim to a mysterious series of murders. Before the young Polish woman Goschka is allowed to enter the sacred state of marriage with Eugen, she comes out Eugen's supermother ( Ingrid van Bergen ) as a wanted male murderer. Shortly afterwards, Goschka took on a job as a cleaner in the crematorium. Eugen's buddy, on the other hand, smells quick money and sells it to a Schlager brothel.

backgrounds

The first leading role of Verona Feldbusch . In the cinema comedy she mimes the beautiful cleaning lady from the east at Ulrich Noethen's side . The port tower at the Konstanz harbor entrance serves as the alleged apartment of the protagonists .

Constance harbor

Reviews

"Wolfsperger's latest prank is a wild mixture of homeland film trash, erotic comedy, weird crime thriller and sentimental love story."

"Anyone who tends to enjoy conventional comedy food should be warned when the name of this director appears."

"Told with great attention to detail (...) figures like those from the Fellini fund."

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Search term: Marry me! ( Memento from January 1, 2007 in the Internet Archive ). In: djfl.de . Accessed: July 31, 2010