Murder run

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Infobox microphone icon
Murder run
(original murder run )
Shipment logo
Radio play from Germany
original language German
Year of production 2008
publication January 19, 2008
genre Thriller
Duration 55 min
production SWR / ARD
Contributors
author Christine Lehmann
Machining Uta-Maria Heim
Director Günter Maurer
music Murat Parlak
speaker

Murder run is a crime radio play of the series of radio crime scene . The original text comes from Christine Lehmann , who for the second time continued the Stuttgart investigative duo designed for Südwestrundfunk , Chief Detective Nina Brändle and Chief Detective Xaver Finkbeiner. Murder Run first aired on January 18, 2008. In addition to the main actors, Angelika Bartsch , Justine Hauer , Hilmar Eichhorn and Taner Sahintürk also performed other well-known speakers and actors.

The present 7th case of the entire series and the second case of the Stuttgart crime scene primarily revolves around the sensitive issue of the rampage . After an anonymous announcement, the investigators must prevent a rampage at a high school in the race against time .

content

The announcement of a rampage at the Hermann-Hesse-Gymnasium is circulating both on the Internet on YouTube and through the warning of a young man dressed in black that the police are on duty : "On June 11th you should be on fire." The Stuttgart police did not take the first warning seriously, After the YouTube report, an emergency plan is created immediately.

This second warning therefore calls the profiler of the State Office of Criminal Investigation, Chief Detective Xaver Finkbeiner and his colleague, Chief Detective Nina Brändle, on the scene, who are supposed to prevent the act in just 24 hours. So they go straight to the manhunt in the affected high school to find whoever might be behind the audio file. There they get to know the German teacher Moser, who tries to bring Hermann Hesse's story Klein und Wagner (1919) closer to the primary school students in his German course . Interestingly, the story is based, among other things, on the real case of the teacher Ernst August Wagner , who once killed his family and twelve other people after the failed marriage. Especially with his favorite student, the introverted Boris, the frustrated pedagogue seems to make a great effort. Brändle and Finkbeiner seem to be on the verge of a breakthrough when the audio text agrees with the quoted material by Hesse and the file from the computer room of the high school with Boris' login data was sent. However, when radio and television found out about this and made it public too quickly, the boy, who was also ready to use violence earlier, stole a weapon from his father's safe . Literally at the last second, the investigators succeed in averting the disaster. But everyone overlooked one important detail. The high proportion of migrants had already been excluded as a factor, but what really moves the teacher Moser? Like the historical figure Wagner, didn't he, too, recently experience the failure of his marriage with the divorce?

background

Against the background of numerous rampages at schools and universities in Europe and the United States, such as in Ansbach , Erfurt or Emsdetten , many parallels can be explained, although here the real perpetrator is not to be found in the ranks of the students for once. The fact that only one year later the rampage in Winnenden north of Stuttgart will take place, which also steals the father's weapon, is a coincidence, but noticeable .

With the figure of the teacher Wagner, Hesse fell back on a historical gunman who was known at the beginning of the 20th century and was reported in the newspapers. Because of its popularity, the Wagner case was suitable for Hesse to stimulate discussions about the responsibility of the individual and society, as well as to illustrate the urgency and topicality of the conflict that his actual character Klein had to fight. Ernst August Wagner first killed his wife and four children with a club in Degerloch in 1913 in order to spare them the consequences of his later deeds and then set fire to four houses in Mühlhausen and shot the twelve inmates who then escaped at random. Eight other people were seriously injured.

Justine Hauer , who speaks here as Ingrid Böhse , is also in front of the camera for the TV version of the crime scene: She works in the Constance investigation team as Annika Beck around Eva Mattes . Hilmar Eichhorn, on the other hand, speaks for the radio crime scene episodes of the MDR, the local investigator Jost Fischer and gives a short guest appearance here, as there are also crossover moments in some radio scenes.

The monthly broadcast of a new case in the following years was interrupted in January 2012. The episode produced for the SWR could not be completed on time. Since even the other broadcasters did not have a finished radio play "in the drawer", the murder run from 2008 was repeated instead .

output

Reviews

Ueli Jäggi, spokesman for Xaver Finkbeiner
  • “With the first crime scene of the SWR from the pen of Christine Lehmann it became clear that one could be able to set a qualitative highlight here. The duo Finkbeiner / Brändle is not only very entertaining because of the fixed regional connection, but above all the cases know how to convince. The sharp change from the province in the first case to the social hotspot of a big city brings a completely different mood into the story and opens up completely new possibilities for the topic. The case itself is the best of the series so far. The plot is winding and the listener can always anticipate a bit more and is therefore superior to the investigators. "
  • “The parallels are of course quickly obvious. Nevertheless, the crime scene builds up tension. Because the police are not so quick to draw this parallel (the story is, after all, required reading ). Murder run is an exciting crime scene, which almost lures the listener on the wrong track and a good measure of tension when the police are actually lured on the wrong track. "
  • "Since then, all of the state broadcasters have been broadcasting the new ARD Radio Tatort once a month, using the creative potential of their best crime writers and attracting additional attention to the traditional radio art form of radio play. The radio Tatort has now reached an audience of millions, and the high number of hits on the Internet (www.radiotatort.ard.de) confirms the acceptance of these thrillers. "
  • “In the media in which the references to radio broadcasts, if any, could only be found with a magnifying glass, radio is being heard again. And the reviews - no matter how they turn out - they are even detailed! "

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. lehmann-christine.de Accessed October 23, 2012.
  2. murat-parlak.de Accessed October 23, 2012.
  3. programm.ard.de
  4. ^ A written statement by Ernst Wagner as PDF, Baden-Württemberg State Archive
  5. Dagmar Dehmer: rampage: even single perpetrators have precursors . In: Der Tagesspiegel . July 27, 2011
  6. Philipp Blom : Paranoid hatred: Ernst August Wagner, 1913 - "Appoints me to the executor" . In: Süddeutsche Zeitung . July 28, 2011
  7. In January no radio "Tatort" at SWR. Report on www.digitalfernsehen.de , accessed on February 5, 2012.
  8. Review of Murder Run ( Memento of the original from May 30, 2014 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. . On: www.hoerspieleipps.net. Accessed October 23, 2012. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.hoerspieleipps.net
  9. Meeting on the murder run . On: gedankenecke.de. Accessed October 23, 2012.
  10. Tom Sprenger: ARD Radio Tatort solves the 50th case. ( Memento of the original from April 23, 2014 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. On: www.radiowoche.de. March 6, 2012. Accessed October 22, 2012. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.radiowoche.de
  11. Sabine Pahlke-Grygier: Tatort Radio - detective stories for the ears . On: www.goethe.de of the Goethe Institute . August 2008. Accessed October 22, 2012.