Crime scene: Poor Nanosh

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Episode of the series Tatort
Original title Poor Nanosh
Country of production Germany
original language German
Production
company
NDR
length 99 minutes
classification Episode 220 ( List )
First broadcast July 9, 1989 on Das Erste
Rod
Director Stanislav Barabáš
script Martin Walser ,
Asta Scheib
production Matthias Esche
music Manfred Huebler
camera Jochen Radermacher
cut Wiebke Koester ,
Anne Wolters
occupation

Poor Nanosh is a television film from the crime series Tatort on ARD and ORF . The film was produced by Norddeutscher Rundfunk under the direction of Stanislav Barabáš and was first broadcast on July 9, 1989. It is the 220th crime scene episode. For the chief detective Paul Stoever ( Manfred Krug ) it is the 11th case. For his colleague Peter Brockmöller ( Charles Brauer ) it is the 8th case in which he is investigating.

action

Valentin Sander, who is called Nanosh by his gypsy family, is a respected citizen of Hamburg and the owner of a large department store. Since he is very enthusiastic about the artist Ragna Juhl, he exhibits her pictures and sculptures in a gallery in his department store. His wife is not at all enthusiastic about it, and he has recently been at odds with his supplier Bleichertz, because he is also advertising for Ragna Juhl. When the situation comes to a head, Sander leaves his wife because of the artist and moves in with his beloved. But it doesn't take long and they get into an argument. She feels hemmed in by him and he only wants her to himself. He knows that his son Georg is also in love with Ragna.

Yanko, the head of the clan, orders his nephew Nanosh to come to him. He advises him to leave the country because he heard on the police radio that Ragna Juhl was found dead. Since Nanosh was still with her that evening and has no alibi, the police will, in his opinion, suspect him. Before Sander can agree, the police appear in the gypsy camp and look for him, so that he has to go into hiding.

The two inspectors Stoever and Brockmöller learn that Sander has determined his eldest son Moritz to take over his business in his department store with immediate effect. The authorized signatory, Heinrich Frohwein, is shocked and fears that the banks will withdraw their loans and bankruptcy threatens. From him, the investigators learn details from Sander's past. A wealthy merchant had adopted Sander and saved him from deportation to the Third Reich . His biological father did not survive the Nazi concentration camp , and so his uncle Yanko became the head of the clan. However, he is upset that his nephew has turned away from his "roots". Especially since he promised Nanosh's father at the time that his son would later take on the leading role within the clan.

Stoever wants to use the solidarity of the gypsies to find Sander. Without further ado, he arrests his son Georg under suspicion of murder and hopes that his father will face it. The plan is working. Sander appears at the police station and confesses to the murder, which he regards as more of an accident. For Stoever, the confession also gives rise to contradictions, and he takes another look at the authorized signatory, Heinrich Frohwein. He had met him as an ambitious employee and had heard from his words that he had a great hatred of gypsies inside. Stoever confronts him with his suspicion that he took advantage of Sander's last argument with the artist and that he killed her.

Before he can arrest Frohwein, however, he jumps to his death in an unobserved moment from his attic apartment.

background

This crime scene is the second case of the investigative duo Stoever and Brockmöller from 1989 and at the same time their last before the political change in Germany. There is no quota.

Titi Winterstein and his band can be seen and heard as musicians , including Häns'che Weiss .

criticism

The critics of the television magazine TV Spielfilm gave it a medium rating (thumbs to the side) and found: “Exciting but ambivalent case”.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Data on the crime scene: Poor Nanosh transmission length at tatort-fundus.de
  2. Crime scene: Poor Nanosh on TV Spielfilm (with pictures of the film)