Crime scene: shot run

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Episode of the series Tatort
Original title Shot run
Country of production Germany
Production
company
WDR
length 88 minutes
Age rating FSK 12
classification Episode 113 ( List )
First broadcast June 1, 1980 on ARD
Rod
Director Wolfgang Staudte
script Peter Hemmer
production Jürgen Sehmisch
camera Götz Neumann
cut Hannes Nikel
occupation

Schußfahrt is a television film from the television crime series Tatort by ARD and ORF . The film was produced by WDR and broadcast for the first time on June 1, 1980. It is the 113th episode in the crime scene series, the 19th with Commissioner Haferkamp .

action

The unemployed sales representative Wiedemann spies on his wife, who has started a relationship with the graphic artist Christian Zehle. He comes up with the plan to kill the lover and lets the contents of his safe disappear into the basement. To do this, he fakes a trip to Frankfurt so that his wife takes the opportunity to receive her lover in the house.

On the way he manipulates the engine of his car so that he has to return home. When he unexpectedly reports back to his wife, Zehle has to flee the window hastily, but Wiedemann awaits him in the garden with a pistol and shoots him in cold blood. He wants his wife to believe that there were two intruders, of whom he could only get one. He describes the same crime as Commissioner Haferkamp, ​​but the traces of the second perpetrator are poor.

Frau Wiedemann secretly tries to reach Christian's friend Rull to ask him if he was the second husband. Rull, who is unemployed and often indulges in alcohol, fits in well with Wiedemann's scheme of the second perpetrator for the time being, after Haferkamp reviewed Zehle's private life. Rull is arrested for the time being and confronted with Wiedemann.

Wiedemann, his wife and Rull assert that they do not know each other. Thereupon Rull tries to blackmail Wiedemann after his release, because he is sure that he used his friend Zehle for an insurance fraud. Wiedemann deposited some of the alleged stolen goods in a locker at the train station and gave Rull the key instead of money in a park. Rull is puzzled and still accepts. The next day, Rull is found dead right there. Haferkamp, ​​who believes that Wiedemann would have been in danger, slowly realizes his wrong game.

Haferkamp gets Mrs. Wiedemann to lure her husband out of the reserve. Because she no longer believes him, she confesses to her husband the affair (which he has known about for a long time) and moves in with her friend. He succeeds in persuading his wife to return. However, she tests him and fakes a phone call with Haferkamp in which she reports that she has found the stolen goods in the house. Wiedemann, who overheard, rushes into the cellar and tries to look. But his wife follows him and now has proof that he just made it up. Suddenly Haferkamp rings and Wiedemann escapes via the terrace exit to his car. A chase begins that ends at a railway embankment. Although Haferkamp believes that he has lost Wiedemann, he stopped a few meters behind the embankment and surrenders.

Production notes

The film was shot from May 14th to June 13th 1979 in the Bavaria-Atelier in Munich-Geiselgasteig. The outdoor shots were taken in Essen and Munich .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Release certificate for the crime scene: shot drive . Voluntary self-regulation of the film industry (PDF). Template: FSK / maintenance / type not set and Par. 1 longer than 4 characters
  2. Wolfgang Staudte - actor, director . In: CineGraph - Lexicon for German-Language Film , Lg. 20, F 35 f.