Crime scene: blind rage

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Episode of the series Tatort
Original title Blind rage
Country of production Germany
original language German
Production
company
SDR
length 86 minutes
classification Episode 132 ( List )
First broadcast January 10, 1982 on ARD
Rod
Director Theo Mezger
script Peter Scheibler
production Bertram Vetter
music Jonas C. Haefeli
camera Justus Pankau
cut Christa Kemnitz
occupation

Blind Fury is the 132nd episode of the Tatort television series . By the South German Radio result produced for the first time on 10 January 1982 at the First Channel of ARD broadcast. For chief detective Eugen Lutz ( Werner Schumacher ) it is the twelfth case. It's about a family drama and the motivations of the perpetrator.

action

The police found the entire family with gunshot wounds in the Däubler family's apartment, from which gunfire was heard. While Ms. Däubler is dead, Ms. Däubler and the family son are taken to hospital, seriously injured. The neighbor, Mr Kronbeck, who alerted the police, told Lutz and Wagner that he had heard three shots from the Däublers' apartment. Shortly before, there was a loud argument in the family's apartment. Ms. Kronbeck says that someone ran out of the house around the time of the crime. Lutz learns from forensics that Mr. Däubler could have shot, it is unlikely that he and his son will survive. Lutz does not believe in a family drama, and he finds traces that point to another person in the apartment. In the hospital, Lutz learns that Mr. Däubler is out of danger, the boy is still in danger. Traces of smoke were found on Däubler's right hand and the murder weapon belonged to him. However, Lutz still has doubts about a family drama and does not rule out an unknown perpetrator.

Lutz and Wagner go to the mother of the murdered Ms. Däubler, Ms. Kleinhans. This testifies that her daughter was a beast to her son-in-law, her son Lorenz ends the conversation and says that he would have liked another man for his sister. He also says that his sister quit smoking for the sake of her husband. Lutz pricked up his ears because several cigarette butts were found in the kitchen. Lutz seeks out Däubler's boss Stöckle, who reports that Däubler was an excellent employee. Stöckle dismisses a difference of opinion shortly before the act as insignificant, Däubler merely had other plans than his boss as a city planner. When looking through the family's Super 8 films, Lutz and Wagner noticed a film about development workers in Africa; this film was unlabeled. Lutz looks for Däubler in the clinic, who cannot remember what happened and asks about his family. He seems mentally confused and talks about a car accident. When Lutz confronts him with his alleged act, the latter falls into a state of shock, so that the doctor breaks off the questioning. In front of the hospital, Lutz and Wagner meet Lorenz Kleinhans, who wants to see his nephew. He doesn't seem to be interested in his brother-in-law. Klaus Schäder, Mrs. Däubler's ex-boyfriend, visits Lutz. He claims to have visited the Däublers on the evening of the crime, he left the family at around 11 p.m., and the deed must have happened shortly afterwards. Ms. Däubler had resumed contact with him a few months earlier, Bernhard Däubler had gone into his development aid plans, while Ms. Däubler was enterprising. Mr Däubler had formally asked the two of them to go out together so that his wife had a little variety.

The neighbor Mrs. Kronbeck confirmed to Lutz that Schäder went in and out of the Däublers, she assumed that he was her lover. Lutz and Wagner visit Mr. Däubler's first wife Hildegard, who is a few years older than Däubler and also reports that Däubler had development aid projects in mind. They grew apart and separated when Bernhard Däubler met Marion. You could not imagine that Marion Däubler had a lover. Lutz goes to see Däubler again, who asks Lutz whether he really shot his wife and son. Däubler can vaguely remember that he had trouble with his boss Stöckle. His wife tore his posters from the wall, suddenly the son stood in the door crying, he didn't know more. Däubler desperate when Lutz tells him that everything points to his perpetrator. The next morning, Lutz and Wagner read a statement in the tabloid press by Däubler's ex-wife that he wanted to return to her. Lutz goes to see her, who admits that they still had sexual contact with each other and that she was his confidante. Däubler wanted to live out his old dream and go to development service, Marion was against it. Däubler's ex-wife shows Lutz photos of an old friend of Däubler's, whom Lutz had also seen on the film about development aid from Däubler's apartment. Lutz visits Däubler again, who denies wanting to return to Hildegard. He tells Lutz and Wagner about his development aid plans and that his wife didn't want to know about them. He wanted to give up his position, his wife was against it, he still cannot remember the act.

When Däubler's mother-in-law and brother-in-law visit Däubler in the hospital, Lorenz Kleinhans brings his brother-in-law chocolates with him, but there is a pistol hidden in the box, an indirect invitation to commit suicide. After a short visit to his son, Däubler sneaks out of the hospital at night. Instead of going to his ex-wife as Lutz suspected, Däubler visits his neighbor Kronbeck and has him give him the duplicate key for his apartment. Kronbeck notifies the police shortly afterwards. When Lutz and Wagner arrive at the apartment, Däubler ponders his act there. He tells Lutz that he can now remember. He had an argument with his boss, who called him a weirdo. At home, he wanted to talk to his wife about it and also tell her that he had applied to development service, but she cursed him. His wife wanted to take the boy and leave him. Suddenly he had the pistol in his hand, he shot his wife in an affect and accidentally also shot his son, then he wanted to shoot himself. When Däubler wants to shoot himself again, Lutz persuades him to think about his son and manages to take the gun away from the desperate Däubler.

Audience and background

When it was first broadcast, this episode attracted 20.63 million viewers, which corresponded to a market share of 54%. The episode was filmed in Stuttgart, Waiblingen, Leonberg and Studios 4 and 5 of the SDR between September 21 and October 24, 1981.

criticism

The critics of the TV magazine TV Spielfilm rate this crime scene positively and comment: "Not" who ", but" why "is important".

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Tatort: ​​Blinde Anger data for the 132nd Tatort at tatort-fundus.de
  2. ^ Tatort: Blinde Wut short review on tvspielfilm.de, accessed on August 20, 2015.