Schlager parade 1961

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Movie
Original title Schlager parade 1961
Country of production Germany
original language German
Publishing year 1961
length 91 minutes
Age rating FSK 12
Rod
Director Franz Marischka
script Franz Marischka
FM signs
production Carl Szokoll
music Gert Wilden
camera Dieter Wedekind
cut Use Wilken
occupation

Schlagerparade 1961 - Don't go home alone is a German hit film by Franz Marischka from 1961.

action

One day the shark gang motorcycle gang appears in the tarantel dance bar , led by a young man who can only be called “shark”. Shark asks waitress Ulla Sorensen monthly 500 marks protection money ; Ulla refuses to pay, and waitress Hanni pretends to speak to a Mr. Scott from the yard, who is supposed to drop by in the tarantula . The gang destroys a couple of glasses and leaves, but wants to come back shortly to check out. Since the ice cream shop owner was also blackmailed against, the police turned on and shortly afterwards found a devastated restaurant, Ulla refrains from alerting the police. Shortly afterwards, Susanne Grosser, who owns the tarantel , returns to town. She brings her travel acquaintance Charly Scott, an Englishman who falls in love with Ulla. The American Billy, who is with Hanni, also appears in the tarantula .

The shark gang is serious about its threat and poses a showcase of tarantula one. Susanne has an idea: With friends of the bar she forms the fictional motorcycle gang Predator , which she runs as “Dynamit Mary”. This is how it appears with the shark, which accepts it after a test of courage. A young man who is only known by the name "Hecht" was accepted into the gang. Hecht is in reality the detective assistant Rolf Hegener, who is supposed to infiltrate the gang and look for the leader. Haifisch always refers all gang members to the boss, who makes all decisions, but can only be reached by phone. The gang members do not know that the shark is the boss himself, who records the announcements of the supposed boss on tape and plays them back when a call is made. Hegner, in turn, has exactly three days to find the boss, otherwise he will be withdrawn from the case.

Shark plans to raid on a money transport, the top prize of 9,999 German marks to bring about a TV show. In addition to Haifisch, Susanne and Rolf take part in the coup in which they initially steal the money, but have Charly Scott steal the suitcase again and bring it to the television studio. As dynamite Mary, Susanne finally has to hand over the first 500 D-Marks that she “blackmailed” from Ulla in the tarantula to the boss. Scott has however exchanged the money for scraps of paper, which angered the shark. He sees through the fraud around Susanne / Mary and realizes that Hecht is a police officer. On tape he speaks a message from the boss that "Dynamit-Mary" is a traitor who is supposed to be snatched by the gang. The gang gathers in a cinema that Haifisch also brings Susanne to. It is Rolf who comes to her aid. In the end, both are captured and locked and tied up in a room of the cinema. Shark lights a bomb and leaves; Rolf succeeds in kicking the fuse. The shark gang has since learned from a tape announcement that Shark is none other than the boss who has used the gang members for his own purposes for years. The gang begins to hunt sharks. It turns out in the end that he is the police chief's unwanted son.

production

Schlagerparade 1961 was the second and last feature film after Marina (1960) in which boxer Bubi Scholz appeared as an actor. It was only incorporated into the plot in a major role on the initiative of Horst Wendlandt and after a personal conversation with Franz Marischka.

The costumes were created by Helga Billian , the film structures are by Wolf Witzemann . The choreography comes from Mario del Marius . The premiere of the film took place on March 2, 1961 in the Stuttgart EM Theater.

Numerous hits are sung in the film:

criticism

For the film service , Schlagerparade 1961 was “modest entertainment with a few ironic tips”. "Foam beat with music", stated the film sheets .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Franz Zwetschi Marischka: Always smile , Munich, Vienna 2001, p. 173 ff.
  2. Schlagerparade 1961. In: Lexicon of international films . Film service , accessed March 2, 2017 .Template: LdiF / Maintenance / Access used 
  3. Critique of the film sheets for the film Schlagerparade 1961 . Quoted from: Schlagerparade 1961 . In: Manfred Hobsch: love, dance and 1000 hit films . Schwarzkopf & Schwarzkopf, Berlin 1998, p. 158.