Police call 110: Heidemarie Göbel

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Episode of the series Polizeiruf 110
Original title Heidemarie Goebel
Country of production GDR
original language German
Production
company
Television of the GDR
length 77 minutes
Age rating FSK 6
classification Episode 59 ( List )
First broadcast June 17, 1979 on GDR 1
Rod
Director Hans Joachim Hildebrandt
script Hans Joachim Hildebrandt
production Helga Lüdde
music Karl-Ernst Sasse
camera Walter Laass
cut Karola Mittelstädt
occupation

Heidemarie Göbel is a German crime film by Hans Joachim Hildebrandt from 1979. The television film was released as the 59th episode in the film series Polizeiruf 110 .

action

Heidemarie Göbel has been with the biologist Dr. Friedhelm Göbel married. At his insistence, she once gave up her medical studies and over time the selfish Friedhelm pushed her more and more into the role of his wife. When Friedhelm wants to go to the cure, he tells her to pack his bags and Heidemarie refuses. She drives to her place of work early because, against his will, she has accepted a job as a studio assistant for the film, where her sister Kerstin Bremer also works. Friedhelm goes briefly to his institute. In the mail he finds the divorce papers that Heidemarie had sent to him through her lawyer. Friedhelm goes to see her on the set and tells her that she owes him everything and that she has only excluded him all these years. She will leave him with the things she had with her when she came to him. Heidemarie, in turn, announces that she will charge him for all the work that she had to do for him in the past few years.

Friedhelm is in financial difficulties because he has invested large sums in the purchase of valuable watches for his collection. He secretly wants to sell part of the 200,000-mark family jewelry that he brought home from the bank for the purpose. The night Friedhelm is on his way to the cure, Heidemarie is attacked at home and drugged with ether . The burglar injected her with a barbiturate and then stole the family jewelry and several watches worth 10,000 marks. When the perpetrator rang the doorbell, Heidemarie was on the phone with her sister, who overheard the crime over the phone. She calls the police. Lieutenant Jürgen Huebner starts the investigation. The syringe used for anesthesia comes from Friedhelm's institute. However, there is no shortage of anesthetic and although the colleagues are critical of the humanly bad superior, no one has a motive for the act.

Heidemarie moves in with her mother, a pharmacist. Increasingly, she behaves enigmatic, is unstable and begins to drink excessively. Friedhelm, who looks for her and wants to bring her back, throws her out of her room. A little later a man poisoned Heidemarie's schnapps and deposited two rings from the stolen family jewelry in her room. Heidemarie is found in time by her mother and taken to the hospital. Jürgen Huebner now receives help from Lieutenant Sabine Berghoff with the investigation. Both start to think that the perpetrator may also come from Heidemarie's circle of friends in the film or that Heidemarie himself could be involved in the act. The investigations show that traces of coal dust were found at both crime scenes. The film team had shot in a brown coal area some time ago. An employee of Friedhelm finally reported to him that some time ago he had given the former employee Ingo Reimers three ampoules of narcotics, which he allegedly needed for film animals. Reimers, on the other hand, is fleeting and Heidemarie has also secretly left the hospital. She wants to see her sister, who is not there, and ends up staying with the truck driver Möller, who took her from the hospital. When Heidemarie sees a wanted poster, he throws her out and reports to the police the next day.

Heidemarie takes a taxi to the lignite area and gives the taxi driver a letter to her sister in which she confesses the crime. She has made an appointment with Reimers in the lignite area because she wants to reverse the burglary that was committed in revenge against Friedhelm and want to return all the stolen things. Reimers had once not been recommended to study by Friedhelm and therefore had an interest in harming Friedhelm. He doesn't think about returning the booty, he just wants to share it with Heidemarie. She reports to Reimers that her sister will go to the police after receiving the letter. The investigators found traces of coal on the envelope and thus guessed the whereabouts of Heidemarie. Just as Reimers is about to flee the brown coal area, the investigators appear and arrest him. Heidemarie is also arrested - with her is also the bag with the stolen valuables that Reimers had taken to the meeting.

production

Heidemarie Göbel was filmed under the working title Rosi G. from November 1 to December 15, 1978 in Berlin , Mittenwalde and in the brown coal area near Magdeborn . The Göbels' house was found in Kleinmachnow . The costumes for the film were created by Doris Wolf, the film structures were created by Karin Schmidt . The film was first broadcast on June 17, 1979 in the first program of GDR television. The audience participation was 52.8 percent.

It was the 59th episode in the film series Polizeiruf 110 . Lieutenant Jürgen Huebner investigated in his 26th case.

literature

  • Peter Hoff: Police call 110. Films, facts, cases. Das Neue Berlin, Berlin 2001, ISBN 3-360-00958-4 , p. 67.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Presentation according to http://www.polizeiruf110-lexikon.de/filme.php?Nummer=059 (link only available to a limited extent)
  2. ^ Peter Hoff: Police call 110. Films, facts, cases . Das Neue Berlin, Berlin 2001, p. 67.