I have to go out to the city center

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Movie
Original title I have to go out to the city center
Do I have to go to the city center Logo 001.svg
Country of production Federal Republic of Germany
original language German
Publishing year 1962
length 91 minutes
Age rating FSK 6
Rod
Director Hans Deppe
script Gustav Kampendonk
production Franz Seitz junior
for Franz Seitz Filmproduktion (Munich)
music Friedrich Meyer
camera Heinz Schnackertz
Erich Küchler
cut Ingeborg Taschner
occupation

I have to go to the Städtele is a German hit and homeland film by Hans Deppe from 1962 . Vico Torriani , Barbara Frey , Monika Dahlberg , Claus Biederstaedt , Dieter Borsche and Peter Nestler are in the main and supporting roles .

action

Ronald Brown collapses during a mountain hike in the freezing cold. His friend Dr. Werner Koch realizes that Ronald has a ruptured appendix and saves his life with an emergency operation on the mountain. The globetrotter Werner now decides to settle down and six months later he works as a family doctor in the small village of Herdingen. Here he meets the young Heidi and falls in love with her. Heidi is an orphan who was taken in six years ago by the siblings Herbert and Carola, the friends of their suddenly deceased parents. Herbert, however, whom she only calls Uncle Herbert, is secretly in love with her, but suppresses his feelings on the advice of Carola. Still, jealously, he withheld the letters that were written to her three years ago by a student Heidi loved. She found it difficult to get over the fact that the student had apparently forgotten her after his departure. On the occasion of her 21st birthday, Herbert is giving her the Gasthof Grüner Kranz , whose bookkeeping Heidi had previously taken over. When Ronald appears in the village one day, it becomes clear that he is the student Heidi mourned at the time. He still loves Heidi, wants to marry her and go out into the world with her. Heidi, however, also loves Werner, to whom she is also connected in other ways.

Heidi's younger brother Dieter Hagen was arrested because he was said to have stolen a lot of money from his employer, bank director Sieper, as a trainee at a bank. There was a matchbook in his suit with the secret number of the safe from which the money was stolen. Dieter escapes from custody and is hidden by Heidi, who believes in his innocence. Heidi lets Werner in and he puts him in a tool shed on the doctor's property. He learns from Dieter that the matchbook came from a certain Luna Bar in Frankfurt, but that Dieter was never in Frankfurt or even in the Luna Bar . In Green wreath Werner listened with a conversation that makes clear that bank manager outputs Sieper in the Luna Bar regularly much money. Werner gets Dieter to face the police, and Heidi turns away from him, disappointed. In reality, however, Werner continues the investigation. The owner of the Luna Bar says he knows Sieper as Mr. Drews, who likes to and often spends a lot of money in his bar. Sieper is finally convicted of the act and arrested, while Dieter is released as innocent. Meanwhile, Heidi has agreed to an engagement with Ronald and Werner wants to leave the place. When Ronald learns from Werner's employee, Röschen, that his friend wants to leave because of a disappointed love, he gives Heidi the choice and she decides to stay with Werner and in Herdingen.

Another love story also ends well: Richie works with Sepp and Otto as clowns in a circus. When the circus goes bankrupt, the three set off and want to try their luck at the Hagenbeck circus in Hamburg. You come to Eva, a friend of Heidi's farm. Here they earn money as workers and help out as waiters and singers in the green wreath . While Sepp and Otto drive to Hamburg in the end, Richie stays with Eva and both of them get married.

Production, publication

I have to go to the Städtele, the film was shot in the CCC studio in Berlin-Spandau . Ina Stein created the costumes, Max Mellin created the buildings .

Vico Torriani sings different songs in the film:

I have to go out to the Städtele and hit the cinemas on August 17, 1962 with a mass start. It was Hans Deppe's last cinema production.

criticism

For the film service , Muß i treated “The happiness and sorrow of an expedition doctor returning to peaceful village practice. With a moderate detective game, folk songs and hits, a long-drawn home film. "

Cinema spoke of a "Schlager Schmonzette" that came along "tough": "In his last movie, Hans Deppe [...] weaves a patchwork of local clichés, detective games, hits and slapstick." The conclusion was then: "Well hung, yes , downright parched. "

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. I have to go out to the town center. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed March 2, 2017 .Template: LdiF / Maintenance / Access used 
  2. If I have to go to the Städtele, see page cinema.de. Retrieved June 17, 2020.