Police call 110: win rate 180

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Episode of the series Polizeiruf 110
Original title Win rate 180
Polizeiruf110 logo 1972.svg
Country of production GDR
original language German
Production
company
Television of the GDR
length 64 minutes
Age rating FSK 6
classification Episode 13 ( list )
First broadcast February 25, 1973 on GDR 1
Rod
Director Wolfgang Luderer
script Walter Dorn
production Heinz Wennemann
music Wolfgang Pietsch
camera Peter Krause
cut Margrit Schulz
occupation

Siegquote 180 is a German crime film by Wolfgang Luderer from 1973. The television film was released as the 13th episode of the Polizeiruf 110 film series .

action

During a trot, a wheel comes off the sulky of trainer Bernd, who is in the lead with his horse Albino. Bernd falls badly and is taken to hospital. The investigations show that the sulky's wheel was sawed. First Lieutenant Peter Fuchs and Lieutenant Vera Arndt take over the investigation. Bernd was a successful trainer who, according to the first questioning, had no enemies. But there is boiling beneath the surface. Bernd had an affair with the wife of the horse breeder Sievers before she started a new affair with the harness racing driver Jochen Pilz. Pilz should actually have driven the race, but a few days before the race, Bernd decided to get into the sulky himself. In his opinion the horse albino was capable of more than the middle places that Pilz always achieved. It was also whispered that Pilz allegedly deliberately kept the horse back from running.

Other men are also possible as perpetrators. The saw that was used to prepare the bike can be found in the feed box of the trainer Reimer. Like other horses, Reimer once sold Albino to Bernd. If successful, the horses bring the trainer 10 percent of the total profit, so that every victory Reimer has to remind him of his loss. The saw found at Reimer actually belongs to the blacksmith of the stud. In the end, Horst Lange from the administration would also have an interest in Bernd's accident, he suspected a relationship between the trainer and his girlfriend Sonja.

Vera Arndt finally finds the solution: She gets old racing newspapers to determine a system between the placements and the money placed. She finds out that Albino has achieved mediocre placements for a long time, with one exception. With one win of the season, the odds of winning were high. She suspects that as a trotting driver, Pilz actually wants to increase the victory rate with poor placements in order to finally achieve victory with the highest rate. If he bets on his own victory, his profit is correspondingly high.

At the next race, Pilz, who will be sitting in the sulky himself and has announced that it will be his last race for Sievers, lets Ms. Sievers bet 300 marks on a victory for Albinos. He wins the race. The odds for victory were 180 to 10, so he won 5,400 marks. Peter Fuchs wants to have Pilz arrested for competition fraud when Vera Arndt comes to him with a query from the betting offices. Another had a total of 2000 marks bet on a win for albinos in six different betting shops and thus won 36,000 marks: Kurt Sievers. He found out about Pilz's system and knew that he would do everything to ensure his financial security in his last race. In the previous race, Bernd threatened to destroy the quota he had worked out with a victory, especially since nobody else knew that Bernd would start. Sievers tampered with the bike in a minute without being observed. He needed money to buy a valuable filly for his breeding. Kurt Sievers is arrested and taken away.

production

Victory Rate 180 was filmed from October 9th to November 20th, 1972 in Berlin and the DEFA Studios Potsdam-Babelsberg. The main location was the Karlshorst trotting track . The costumes for the film were created by Elisabeth Lützkenberg , and the film structures were created by Christoph Lindemann . The film underwent on 25 February 1973 at the first program of the television of the GDR its television premiere.

It was the 13th episode in the film series Polizeiruf 110 . First Lieutenant Peter Fuchs and Lieutenant Vera Arndt investigated their 11th case. "The experienced television director Wolfgang Luderer tells the story with a lot of sense for the visual stimuli of the milieu", so the criticism.

literature

  • Peter Hoff: Police call 110. Films, facts, cases. Das Neue Berlin, Berlin 2001, ISBN 3-360-00958-4 , pp. 56–58.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Presentation according to http://www.polizeiruf110-lexikon.de/filme.php?Nummer=013 (link only available to a limited extent)
  2. ^ Peter Hoff: Police call 110. Films, facts, cases . Das Neue Berlin, Berlin 2001, p. 57.