Police call 110: Including risk

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Episode of the series Polizeiruf 110
Original title Including risk
Country of production GDR
original language German
Production
company
Television of the GDR
length 69 minutes
classification Episode 94 ( List )
First broadcast December 16, 1984 on GDR 1
Rod
Director Thomas Jacob
script Hariette Plath
production Gabriele Roetger
music Arnold Fritzsch
camera Horst Klewe
cut Bert Schultz
occupation

Inclusive Risk is a German crime film by Thomas Jacob from 1984. The television film was released as the 94th episode of the Polizeiruf 110 film series .

action

19-year-old Freddy Zieske can't get along with his stepfather Hermann. He thinks Hermann would prefer his own son Max to him. In fact, Hermann doesn't think much of Freddy, as he is too “unmanly” in his eyes: Freddy wants to be a journalist. He also suffers from asthma, which is why he is not taken seriously in construction and is only assigned to light work. Since Hermann introduced him to his company, complaints about Freddy, who is regularly late, are passed on directly to him. That doesn't improve the father-son relationship either. Freddy has secretly made friends with former criminal Kulle and plans to buy his house from him. He wants to live there with his girlfriend. Freddy has already paid off the first installments. What nobody knows is that Freddy is secretly making minor break-ins. With the often low profit, he can collect over 1,000 marks for the house. He commits the break-ins based on Kulle's earlier breaches: he always climbs through the ceiling into the rooms below. He catches the rubble with an open umbrella, and every now and then he speaks his actions on tape during the break-ins in a radio play-like manner.

Freddy's mother Traudel suffers from the bad relationship between Freddy and Hermann. She persuades Hermann to take Freddy out for a beer one evening. Freddy forgets the invitation, however, spends the evening with his girlfriend, tries to break into a shop and knocks down a security guard, and later sits down with Kulle for a beer in a pub. Here Hermann sees him and fetches him out of the pub in an exposing manner. At home there is an argument and Freddy packs his things and leaves. He moves into a forest hut, where he has Max bring his burglary tools. He has seen the jewelry department in a department store and now finally wants to make the big break. Last but not least, he needs money quickly, as Kulle has allegedly received a lucrative offer for his house.

The police around Captain Peter Fuchs are looking in vain for the thief. A comparison with old cases brings you to Kulle, who worked on the same principle as the new thief. Kulle, however, has long since retired. A few days later, Traudel reports her son to the police as missing. She mentions her son's friendship with Kulle, and the investigators prick up their ears. They examine Freddy's room, find the screen used during the break-ins and also Freddy's tape recordings in which he announces that he finally wants to commit a major breach.

Meanwhile, Freddy has broken into the department store and wants to use an elevator to get into the sales rooms. The floor door that he chose was locked from the inside with a rope because the elevator was considered defective. Since he is actually neither going up nor down, Freddy cannot open the door to the sales rooms either because of the rope and the missing knife, so he tries to cut the ropes with fire. In doing so, he sets paper on fire. The smoke causes the asthmatic to breathlessly, but he can save himself from the cabin via the emergency exit of the elevator. The fire meanwhile sets off a fire alarm. Peter Fuchs suspects that the alarm has something to do with Freddy's announced break and goes to the department store.

Freddy rappels down from the elevator into the shaft, but has to find below that all doors are locked. With the last of his strength, he climbs up the long rope and tries to catch his breath while lying on the elevator. He hears Peter Fuchs and the guy he brought in arrive in the side elevator on his floor. Due to the traces of fire, Peter Fuchs suspects that Freddy is still in the building. He tries to flee again to rappel down, but has no strength left. He falls into the depths. At the hospital, his parents are told that although he survived, he will be paraplegic. At the end you see Hermann pushing Freddy through the city streets in a wheelchair.

production

Including Risk was shot from November 28, 1983 to January 30, 1984 in Berlin and the surrounding area and in Erfurt . The costumes for the film were created by Anneliese Pulst , the film structures were created by Reinhard Welz . The film had its premiere on December 16, 1984 in the first program of East German television. The audience participation was 52.7 percent.

It was the 94th episode in the film series Polizeiruf 110 . Captain Peter Fuchs was investigating his 55th case. The main actor, Dirk Nawrocki, who moved to the Federal Republic of Germany in 1984, is not mentioned in the credits.

literature

  • Peter Hoff: Police call 110. Films, facts, cases. Das Neue Berlin, Berlin 2001, ISBN 3-360-00958-4 , p. 102.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Presentation according to http://www.polizeiruf110-lexikon.de/filme.php?Nummer=094 (link only available to a limited extent)
  2. ^ Peter Hoff: Police call 110. Films, facts, cases . Das Neue Berlin, Berlin 2001, p. 102.