IA in Upper Bavaria (1956)

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Movie
Original title IA in Upper Bavaria
Country of production Germany
original language German
Publishing year 1956
length 85 minutes
Age rating FSK 12
Rod
Director Hans Albin
script Hans Fitz
Hans Albin
production Jochen Genzow
Gustl Lautenbacher
music Peter Igelhoff
camera Ernst W. Kalinke
cut Gertrud Hinz-Nischwitz
occupation

IA in Oberbayern (pronounced "Eins A in Oberbayern") is a German Heimatfilm comedy by Hans Albin from 1956.

action

According to her father's wishes, the young Greta Bullerjahn is supposed to hire the lawyer Dr. Marry Hans von Spörling. Greta is actually together with the journalist Fred, but two years ago he withdrew from the family because he was rejected as a son-in-law by General Director Bullerjahn. Now he learns of Greta's upcoming engagement and hurries to her from America. He bursts into the engagement party and announces that he wants to marry Greta. While father Bullerjahn, Hans von Spörling and Fred retreat to an adjoining room to discuss the matter, Greta packs her things and leaves with an unknown destination. Father Bullerjahn stipulates that Greta will have his wife, who will bring her back to him first. Servant Fritz slips Fred a piece of paper on which Greta has written down her destination Upper Bavaria. Dr. Hans von Spörling hires a detective agency to locate Greta and her car with registration number IA 20238. Fred, in turn, calls the detective's office, specifies Upper Bavaria as the search area and determines that all information should go to him directly.

The detective agency assigns its best man in Munich, the quick-change artist Findeisen, to Greta. In fact, he found her during her trip to Garmisch. Findisen follows her in various masquerades until Greta has an accident in the village of Schlaffenhofen. Her car is unable to drive and Greta stays in town. On the first night she met Martl, the forest assistant, who was suffering from the jealousy of his girlfriend Anni. Spontaneously, he and Greta forge a plan: They want to pretend to be fiancé in order to wipe out Anni as well as Fred and Hans von Spörtling. Anni is outraged that the Berliner has taken her fiancé from her and calls all the women of Schlaffenhofen to protest in front of the inn. Only the village policeman can end the uprising. Greta, on the other hand, moves into the forester Zacherias Kiernberger's forester's house for safety.

Detective Findeisen informs Fred that he has found Greta. Fred goes to Schlaffenhofen immediately. Hans von Spörling, in turn, is informed by the police that Greta's car is damaged in Schlaffenhofen and drives off with General Director Bullerjahn. Everyone appears in the village when Greta and Martl are at the festival in neighboring Rohr. While Hans von Spörling and General Director Bullerjahn drink a number of schnapps at Zacherias Kiernberger's in order to prepare for the party, Fred already decides the fight for Greta for himself at the party: he defeats Martl while finger hacking . Anni, in turn, is reconciled with Martl, but now she knows that it was all just joke and that she was jealous in vain. Hans von Spörling and General Director Bullerjahn make a fool of themselves at the folk festival because they loudly berlin, wear ridiculous traditional costumes and are soon very drunk. Fred passed the last exam in the evening and successfully windowed Greta. Hans von Spörling catches the wrong window and in the end struggles to fend off the advances of Zacherias Kiernberger's landlady Emerenzia.

production

IA in Upper Bavaria is based on the play of the same name by Hans Fitz , which was made into a film by Franz Seitz in 1937 . A continuation of the film was 1956 II-A in Berlin .

Originally Georg Wilhelm Pabst provided as director. The film was shot from October 23 to November 28, 1955 at Schliersee (including in the farmer's theater) and the surrounding area as well as in the Bavaria Film Studios , Geiselgasteig. The costumes were created by Hildegard Bornkessel , the film structures are by Max Seefelder . The film premiered on February 23, 1956 in Mohren in Munich . Alternative titles of the film are Zwei Preuß'n in Bayern and Geh, open your window .

criticism

For the film service , IA in Upper Bavaria was a "Heimatfilm-Schwank, which pretends to look the people in the mouth, but rather speculates on bad taste and prejudice." "Sack cement nochamol: a real rubbish!" Summarized Cinema .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Georg Wilhelm Pabst . In: Der Spiegel , No. 40, 1955, p. 48.
  2. ^ IA in Upper Bavaria. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed March 2, 2017 .Template: LdiF / Maintenance / Access used 
  3. See cinema.de