Tatort: ​​Everything has its price

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Episode of the series Tatort
Original title everything has it's price
Country of production Germany
original language German
Production
company
RBB
length 88 minutes
classification Episode 833 ( list )
First broadcast April 1, 2012 on Das Erste
Rod
Director Florian Kern
script Hartmut Block ,
Michael Gantenberg
production Mario cancer
music Rudolf Moser
camera Bernd Fischer
cut Trevor Holland
occupation

Everything has its price is a television film from the crime series Tatort , which first aired on April 1, 2012 on Erste . In his 32nd and 26th case, the Berlin team of investigators Till Ritter and Felix Stark , portrayed by Dominic Raacke and Boris Aljinovic , deal with the murder of a taxi entrepreneur found dead in his office.

action

The taxi entrepreneur Herbert Klemke is found dead in his office. His secretary Edith Welziehn, who found her boss, reports to Ritter and Stark that 10,000 euros were missing from the cash register. Only she and her boss knew that there was a large amount of cash in the cash register at the end of the month. Klemke must have known his killer because he let him into his office himself. Stark talks to Klemke's daughter Dagmar, who has lived in Australia for eight years and is trying to open a diving school there. Dagmar's mother died in a car accident when she was still a child, Herbert Klemke was behind the wheel. Ms. Welziehn testifies that Bülent Delikara, a former Klemke driver who has meanwhile started his own business, was still with Klemke on the evening of his death and demanded money from him for his services. He behaved “like a madman”, and Dagmar was also in her father's office that evening. Dagmar and her father had also argued over money, Klemke probably no longer wanted to support his daughter financially.

According to Dagmar, her father had no financial problems, the entire house was his. He financed the house from his wife's life insurance. Ritter asks Delikara, while Stark visits his bank advisor Christa Meinecke, who Klemke called shortly before his death. Delikara says that he drove a taxi the entire night of the crime, but the journeys are nowhere registered because he drove black. Stark finds out that Klemke had an argument with Ms. Meinecke and she spoke excitedly on the answering machine. Christa Meinecke visits Franziska Zuckowski and her brother Pit in their delicatessen shop and reports to both of them about the police investigation. Meanwhile, Ritter and Stark find Dagmar Klemke's business plan for the diving school in Australia in Klemke's office. Apparently she wanted 70,000 euros from her father to start a business, but her father's signature is missing on a check. Pit Zuckowski visits Dagmar, they have apparently known each other for a long time. When he gets intrusive, his sister Franziska comes over and brings Pit home.

At Dagmar Klemke's business partner, the officials found out that Dagmar needed a contribution of 70,000 euros, the amount she asked her father for. Dagmar is clueless about an argument with her father, but eventually she has to admit the argument. She also reports that Franziska and Pit Zuckowski, who were tenants at Klemke's delicatessen shop, went to see him, after which Dagmar would have left their father's office. Ritter and Stark visit the siblings, Pit says that they too had a dispute with Klemke because of the high ancillary rental costs. Meanwhile, the 10,000 euros that have disappeared from Klemke's cash register are found in Delikara's taxi. He claims to have found Klemke dead and then took the money. The head of the bank, where Christa Meinecke works, reports to Ritter and Stark about transactions in which funds were temporarily moved from one account to another in order to establish the creditworthiness of customers, including from Klemke's account to Dagmars and other accounts. Meinecke then admits these transactions to the officials. Klemke had found out, that was the reason for the argument. Christa Meinecke claims to have carried out these transactions to compensate for the injustice of the bank, for which the small customer does not count, only large customers receive loans. She did not harm anyone financially through her behavior and tried to explain it to Klemke, but Klemke refused to let herself be spoken to. She denies the murder, but is arrested on suspicion.

On the list of customers who Christa Meinecke had given creditworthiness, Ritter and Stark find the Zuckowskis delicatessen. The two seek out the Zuckowskis and confront them with their findings. The officials suspect that this is the reason for the dispute between Klemke and the Zuckowskis. The Zuckowskis claim to have known nothing about the transactions. In the meantime, Delikara is exonerated because the time of the crime could be narrowed down and he was driving a regular customer outside of Berlin at the time. Franziska Zuckowski, meanwhile, visits Dagmar and asks her for a guarantee, but she refuses and leaves her childhood friend in the lurch. The opening of the will shows that Ms. Welziehn inherits 70,000 euros for her loyal service, Dagmar inherits a house in Ziethen that she knows nothing about, the houses in Berlin are heavily in debt and practically belong to the bank, otherwise her father has no more assets, just only Debt. Her father wanted to start over with his daughter in Australia. Ritter and Stark also take a look at the will, they notice that Dagmar has practically only inherited debts and Ms. Welziehn exactly the amount that Dagmar actually needed for her diving school. The officers also stumble across the house in Ziethen, Ms. Welziehn's hometown. The photo of the house hangs in both Klemke's and Welziehn's apartment.

Meanwhile Dagmar learns from Mrs. Welziehn that she was in Venice with her father. The relationship between Klemke and Mrs. Welziehn, which went on for decades, had cooled lately and Klemke only held Welziehn off. Ritter and Stark go to the two of them and listen to Mrs. Welziehn's confession, then they arrest her. She told the officials that Klemke had suddenly revealed his Australia plans to her on the evening of the crime. Out of anger that he didn't want to spend his old age with her, but wanted to accompany his daughter's diving school, she killed him.

background

The film was produced by Eikon Media GmbH (see: Eikon (production company) ) and Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (RBB) in cooperation with ARD-Degeto .

reception

Audience ratings

The first broadcast of Everything Has Its Price on April 1, 2012 was seen by a total of 8.20 million viewers in Germany and achieved a market share of 22.4% for Das Erste .

Reviews

TV Spielfilm rated the film too much everyday drama , too little tension .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Tatort: ​​Everything has its price General information at tatort-fundus.de
  2. ^ Tatort: ​​Everything has its price , accessed October 31, 2014.
  3. "Everything has its price" - tv-Spielfilm