Crime scene: eight, nine - out

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Episode of the series Tatort
Original title Eight, nine - out!
Country of production Germany
original language German
length 88 minutes
classification Episode 166 ( List )
First broadcast February 10, 1985 on Das Erste
Rod
Director Jürgen Roland
script Jürgen Roland ,
Uwe Erichsen
production Dieter von Volkmann
music Hans Posegga
camera Werner Hoffmann
cut Birgit Bosboom-Schröder
occupation

Eight, nine - out! is the 166th television film in the crime scene crime series. From the Hessian Radio produced the episode was in on 10 February 1985 First program of the ARD broadcast for the first time. It is the only case of police chief Dietze, portrayed by Klaus Löwitsch . The first crime scene commissioner of the Hessischer Rundfunk, Klaus Höhne ( commissioner Konrad ), plays a gangster here.

action

The outgoing police chief Reinhold Dietze, who has quit his duty to move to his new girlfriend in Hamburg, is routinely on patrol with his young colleague police sergeant Michael Lück when they are called to a robbery in the city center, the owner of the shop and one Customers are seriously injured. To Lück's horror, the injured person is his newlywed wife. Meanwhile, the boxing promoter Bruno Komschak catches his boxer Helmut Zander, who urgently needs money, with a gun and reproaches Zander for having supposedly made the gun disappear in Offenburg at the time. Komschak therefore also comes to the conclusion that Zander might have carried out the attack in the city center, which was reported in the local media, which is later confirmed by newspaper reports about the murder weapon. Dietze sees through his young colleague Lück, who is not only afraid for his wife, but also has a thirst for revenge against the perpetrator.

The KTU reveals that the weapon with which Lück's wife was shot was used in a bank robbery in Offenburg five years ago, when three bank robbers stole a quarter of a million D-Marks. Lück, who almost shoots a suspect who was not involved in the crime against his wife, takes a police undercover agent, who gives him information about the crime in the area around Komschak and tells him that Zander was the perpetrator. Lück goes to Komschak and asks him about Helmut Zander, Komschak pretends he doesn't know where he is. After Lück leaves, Komschak has Zander brought in, who demands money from him, and Komschak wants Zander to go underground. The bistro owner Petra, who is friends with Dietze, speaks to him about the attack in Offenburg, although she cannot know from the media that the weapon was identical in both cases. Petra later meets with Komschak, who had robbed the bank with Zander and Petra had driven the getaway car, the plan came from Petra. Petra urges them to get rid of pikeperch. Komschak then gives Zander, who is still worried about money, the weapon back and, after consulting Petra, encourages him to raid a supermarket. Petra calls the police anonymously, so that Lück rushes to the supermarket with a colleague while Zander is carrying out the attack. Lück recognizes Zander before Lück can shoot, Zander shoots him and is then arrested. Zander admits that he was there at the robbery in Offenburg, Dietze correctly combines, based on his statement and Petra's mention of the robbery, that Petra was also involved in the bank robbery and storms her bistro.

Production and audience rating

Eight, nine - out! was filmed between May 28 and July 11, 1984 in Frankfurt am Main. Some scenes of this episode were filmed in the Frankfurt-Bornheim district of Frankfurt . For example, in the supermarket at Berger Strasse 234, which still exists today under a different name. When it was first broadcast, this episode was able to reach 9.47 million viewers, which corresponded to a market share of 29%.

criticism

The critics of the television magazine TV-Spielfilm rate this crime scene positively as “true to life and played convincingly”.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Crime scene: eight, nine - out! Data on the 166th crime scene at tatort-fundus.de
  2. Short review on tvspielfilm.de, accessed on May 17, 2015.