Police call 110: glass splinters

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Episode of the series Polizeiruf 110
Original title broken glass
Country of production GDR
original language German
Production
company
Television of the GDR
length 76 minutes
classification Episode 76 ( List )
First broadcast November 29, 1981 on GDR 1
Rod
Director Georg Schiemann
script Georg Schiemann
Werner Fiedler
production Helga Lüdde
music Horst Kruger
camera Horst Klewe
cut Edith Kaluza
occupation

Glass splitter is a German crime film by Georg Schiemann from 1981. The television film was released as the 76th episode of the film series Polizeiruf 110 .

action

In a photo optics shop in Berlin, the glass pane is smashed late in the evening and high-quality cameras are removed from the shop window display. The shopkeeper notices the break-in, but cannot catch the burglar. He gets into a waiting car and disappears. A little later he lets the driver stop and gets out. Since you saw two people in the car, you won't stop with just one person, he explains. The driver is stopped a little later, and because the bag with the stolen goods is found in the back seat, he comes into custody. Marunde initially asserts that she has nothing to do with the break-in; he just picked up a hitchhiker. During the interrogation he gradually admits that he was complicit.

Jacki, as the real perpetrator is called, flees across a lake in a rowboat. He is hit by the motorboat of the Budack family, who are on their way home with their daughter Ilona; they had visited the grandparents. During the evasive maneuver, Ilona disembarked and disappeared without a trace. Father Heinz Budack dives in vain for his daughter in the dark. It is Jacki who brings her to the surface and gives the troubled parents instructions for first aid. Heinz and Gerti take Ilona to the hospital and call Jäcki her name and address.

A few days later, Jacki appears at the Budacks' house, who are grateful for him. Jacki is allowed to eat with them and stay the night. Because he is supposedly looking for work and has not yet got a permanent place to live, the Budacks put him on their weekend property and initially lend him 500 marks. Jäcki uses the house to temporarily store the booty from his break-ins. His accomplice Marunde from the electric shop breakdown has long since confessed to the police that he was out with a certain Jacki. The police found a large part of the stolen alcohol and electronics that Jacki had stored in Marunde's apartment. The investigations by the investigators Oberleutnant Jürgen Huebner and Lieutenant Vera Arndt show that Jäcki was involved in more than 60 similar burglaries or was even the main executor. The broken window panes are characteristic. In Berlin and the surrounding area, break-ins with broken glass panes are increasing. By chance, Heinz discovers Jäcki's warehouse with stolen goods in the weekend house. He gives Jacki the ultimatum to get the goods out of the house by the next day. He doesn't want to report Jacki because he saved Ilona. Heinz tells his wife nothing and he lies to Jürgen Hübner that Ilona's rescuer never contacted them.

During a break-in into an electrical shop, Jacki is surprised by an employee and knocks him down. The employee dies a little later from his injuries. Jäcki is now being wanted on a wanted list, and so Heinz and Gerti also find out that their lodger is a murderer. Gerti had previously lent Jäcki 2,000 marks, while Heinz had already become suspicious of Jäcki's demand for 3,000 marks. Now they both decide to go to the police. Jäcki is driving the couple's car, but leaves it in a motorway parking lot to continue hitchhiking. Finally he is located on the way to Dresden . Jäcki was arrested at a construction site and arrested by Vera Arndt. Jürgen Hübner will now speak serious words with the Budack couple.

production

Glass splinters were shot from January 22nd to March 15th, 1981 in Zeuthen , Eichwalde and Berlin . The costumes of the film created Isolde Müller-Claud that Filmbauten submitted by Hans-Joachim Hoelzel . The film premiered on November 29, 1981 in the first program of East German television. The audience participation was 54.8 percent.

It was the 76th episode in the film series Polizeiruf 110 . First Lieutenant Jürgen Hübner investigated in his 36th case and Lieutenant Vera Arndt in her 45th case.

literature

  • Peter Hoff: Police call 110. Films, facts, cases. Das Neue Berlin, Berlin 2001, ISBN 3-360-00958-4 , p. 84.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Presentation according to http://www.polizeiruf110-lexikon.de/filme.php?Nummer=076 (link only available to a limited extent)
  2. ^ Peter Hoff: Police call 110. Films, facts, cases . Das Neue Berlin, Berlin 2001, p. 84.