Ingeborg (1960)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Movie
Original title Ingeborg
Country of production Germany
original language German
Publishing year 1960
length 88 minutes
Age rating FSK 16
Rod
Director Wolfgang Liebeneiner
script Curt Goetz ,
Willibald Eser
production Ludwig Waldleitner
music Peter Thomas
camera Günther Senftleben
cut Lilian Seng ,
Ursula Zschiesche
occupation

Ingeborg is a German film comedy from 1960 based on the play of the same name by Curt Goetz . Ingrid Ernest plays a woman between two men ( Walter Giller and Dietmar Schönherr ), directed by Wolfgang Liebeneiner .

action

Ingeborg and her husband Ottokar, a somewhat absent-minded and awkward-looking, friendly contemporary who achieved great wealth through the invention of an extremely practical plastic bottle, have a happy marriage. Actually. Because one day Ingeborg receives a visit from her old school friend Peter, who is completely the opposite of the snore Ottokar. The cosmopolitan and smart Peter likes to be mysterious, and Ingeborg soon fell in love with this man from her past. She doesn't really know him at all! Because Ingeborg hadn't noticed Peter's enthusiasm from the past. During school, Peter had seen the girl at a forbidden meeting with Ottokar, but when a teacher tried to force him to tell him, he refused this request and was therefore expelled from school.

Since then Ingeborg has been blown away by the unknown "knight" and has since praised Ottokar's chevaleresque behavior. One day Ottokar got tired of it and finally pretended to be that stranger. Now the dizziness threatens to be exposed. Both men love Ingeborg and, annoyingly, also like each other, which they show at so many drinking parties together. After a few entanglements, the young woman finds that she loves her two husbands too, each for himself and each other equally. So what to do Ingeborg does not want to cheat or leave her own husband because she loves Ottokar. On the other hand, Peter has everything that Ottokar lacks. She asks her fun-loving aunt Ottilie, who is never at a loss for a wisdom, for advice. She knows what to do: “The woman stays with the man she loves, and she has a liaison with the other.” It is also clear that the two men concerned are not particularly enthusiastic about this “immoral” idea.

Production notes

Ingeborg , the last Curt Goetz film adaptation in which the author was personally involved, premiered on October 6, 1960 in the Universum in Cologne. Goetz did not see the film again, he died around four weeks earlier.

Wolf Englert and Ernst Richter were responsible for the film construction, Wolfgang Bellenbaum was assistant director.

Curt Goetz played Ottokar and Adele Sandrock played the hard-drinking aunt Ottilie at the successful premiere of the play, with which the Berlin Theater on Kurfürstendamm was opened on October 8, 1921 .

Reviews

"A flick that does not deny the stage reproach through a fireworks of dialogues, which [was] staged in a chamber play style with quite different forces at a leisurely pace ..."

"After the funny play by Curt Goetz in the style of a conventionally staged, but on the whole pleasantly entertaining dialog comedy."

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Ingeborg in Paimann's film lists ( Memento of the original from May 19, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / old.filmarchiv.at
  2. Ingeborg. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed January 22, 2017 .Template: LdiF / Maintenance / Access used