Restricted area (film)

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Movie
Original title Restricted area
Country of production Germany
original language German
Publishing year 1966
length 94 minutes
Age rating FSK 18
Rod
Director Will Tremper
script Will Tremper
production Ernst Neubach
music Heinz Schreiter
camera Hans Jura
cut Ursula Möhrle
occupation

Sperrgebiet is a German feature film from 1966 by Will Tremper with Suzanne Roquette , Harald Leipnitz and Guido Baumann (Swiss guessing fox in Robert Lembke's What am I? ) In the leading roles. The story was based on a novel by the producer Ernst Neubach , who gave his cinematic farewell performance with this film.

action

The young, attractive Ann works in a Berlin drive-in cinema. One day she meets the eloquent and charming real estate agent Bernie Kallmann, who quickly wraps her around her finger with his cosmopolitanism, and falls in love with him. What Ann does not know: Bernie's demeanor towards her, as towards many other women, has method, because Kallmann is not only a pimp , but also an important member of an entire ring that controls the entire prostitution industry in the city.

When Bernie knows Ann's feelings for sure, he persuades her emphatically to go on the street and work as a prostitute. But then Bernie makes a big mistake: He falls in love too, with Ann. Now Kallmann tries to pull Ann out of there again after he has first pushed his flame into the prostitution swamp. As expected, with this action he gets into massive conflicts with his gang of pimps. After all, the crook with heart has to pay for the rediscovery of his humanity with his own life.

Production notes

Sperrgebiet was created in April / May 1966 in West Berlin and was premiered on June 3, 1966.

Supporting actor Ralf Gregan also worked as Tremper's assistant director, Dagmar Lassander made her film debut here.

According to Tremper's statement to the time , the film is said to have been brought to the cinemas by the Gloria film distributor in a badly mutilated version.

Reviews

Tremper himself judged his work Sperrgebiet as follows: "A horrible story of an innocence from the country who becomes a hooker out of love."

The lexicon of the international film summed up “a tie between sentimentality, brutality and speculation fluctuating colportage. The implied confrontation with prostitution is only insufficient camouflage. "

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ The case of Will Tremper in: Die Zeit (37/1966), from September 9, 1966
  2. Berliner Trauma in: Der Spiegel (19/1966), from May 2, 1966
  3. restricted area. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed January 12, 2018 .Template: LdiF / Maintenance / Access used