Hooray, the Swedes are here

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Movie
Original title Hooray, the Swedes are here
Country of production Germany
original language German
Publishing year 1978
length 84 minutes
Age rating FSK 18
Rod
Director Franz Josef Gottlieb
script Erich Tomek
(as Florian Burg )
production Karl Spiehs
music Gerhard Heinz
camera Franz X. Lederle
cut Gisela Haller
occupation

Hurray, the Swedes are here is a German sex film fun game from 1978 by Franz Josef Gottlieb .

action

Niki Moser is a young Bavarian hotelier, whose usually vacant house gives him major financial problems. He had borrowed 400,000 marks from the mayor to pull up his gem, but the guests stayed away. Niki had to promise the mayor that she would marry his beautiful daughter Marianne for the money. You like each other, but getting married is not an option, and so the two young people consider how to repay the money to Mr. Papa before you have to exchange rings. The hotel needs more pep and sex appeal, and that's how you come up with the glorious idea of ​​turning the boring overnight building into a hip fitness center for very special physical exercises and intersex encounters. But this reorganization also costs money, and so Niki pumps the influential Ministerialrat Wiesinger for funding. The old official fox is not completely averse, but would only really get involved with the state dough if the concept is right and the ruble is rolling. So some eye-catchers are needed, and so that Niki always gets his meeting and fitness facility full of paying guests, he organizes a group of extraordinarily well-built young Swedes who are willing to undress, led by the eye-catcher Betty, a splendid specimen of a devotional and erotic Swede .

The young pretty ones only need to splash around in the hotel's swimming pool, and a whole row of men who are just as willing to pay as they are willing to mate immediately gather around them. Marianne takes care of the musical entertainment factor when she unceremoniously guides a brass band into the hotel, which marches through the town under the direction of the postilion. The same letter carrier quickly takes a liking to the attractive mayor's daughter, which in turn brings her blond (and up to then very platonic) friend, Moser-Niki, onto the scene, as he begins to realize how desirable Marianne actually is. In the meantime, Ministerialrat Wiesinger and his blonde playmate Iris have come to see if everything is going well. His wife, however, gets wind of it and hurries to follow her unfaithful husband. Wiesinger was already unlucky on arrival: First a shepherd's hour with Iris in the meadow, between cows and bulls that paid their business on his face, turned out to be a bad idea, then two inmates of a nearby mental hospital, Max and Franz, broke out and stole their clothes from both of them. All of this led to the madman for Wiesinger and Wiesinger himself being mistaken for one of the two escaped and finally being hunted. Ultimately, however, it all leads to a happy ending (especially for Niki and Marianne, who become a couple).

Production notes

The 19 days of shooting Hurray, the Swedes are there took place from April 24 to May 19, 1978 in Pfronten in the Allgäu. The film was completed on June 21, 1978, Hurray was premiered , the Swedes are there on June 29, 1978 in Munich and Fulda.

Lisa Film Production Manager Erich Tomek wrote the script under the pseudonym Florian Burg. Carl Schenkel was assistant director, Heidi Wujek designed the costumes . There were no film structures.

criticism

"A last-class swank, full of idiotic slapstick, rough sex scenes and vulgar dialogues."

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ German Institute for Film Studies (ed.): German Films 1978, compiled by Rüdiger Koschnitzki. P. 90
  2. Hurray, the Swedes are here. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed March 2, 2017 .Template: LdiF / Maintenance / Access used