Crime scene: Deadly trust

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Episode of the series Tatort
Original title Deadly trust
Country of production Austria
original language German
Production
company
Cult Movies GmbH / ORF
length 89 minutes
classification Episode 631 ( List )
First broadcast May 14, 2006 on Das Erste
Rod
Director Holger Barthel
script Thomas Baum
production Niki List and Burkhard WR Ernst
music Yullwin Mak
camera Peter von Haller
cut Sonja Lesowsky
occupation

Deadly Trust is a television film from the Tatort crime series . It is the 14th case of the Vienna chief inspector Moritz Eisner , portrayed by Harald Krassnitzer . The by ORF contribution was produced on May 14, 2006 at the First sent for the first time. Eisner is investigating a murder case that appears to be based on international white-collar crime, but which then conceals private reasons.

action

At a seminar by the company “Ultra Light Car” there was a very irritated mood among the participants. Shortly afterwards, the head of department and physicist Dr. Raimund Jakobi shot by a sniper while doing recreational sports. When Eisner brings the news of her death to his wife, he realizes that she is more angry than sad. Jakobi completely neglected his family for his work and left them with debts.

Hannes Kubek heads the business of the ULC company, and there they are about to successfully end the development of a worldwide new material for the automotive industry. The future of the company also depends on the success of this multi-million dollar investment. Therefore, the board is pushing for the project to be completed quickly. However, when the news of the physicist's death arrives, the employees are shocked and the scheduled test run is canceled. Eisner realizes that Jakobi was a very difficult boss and overall very unpopular. Still, he was the creative core and his death hits the company hard. Kubek firmly believes that international competition is behind the murder. Eisner, on the other hand, examines the group of employees. Jakobi and Dr. Christine Schwarz was a relationship, but she was in his shadow and was often exposed by him in front of colleagues. After his death, Kubek promotes her to team leader. However, she assures Eisner that she did not kill Jakobi. Their relationship was tense, but they also consider themselves very capable of suffering. From her Eisner receives a reference to Kubek's 16-year-old daughter. The dead man obviously had a relationship with this as well. Before Eisner can talk to her, however, she is standing on a skyscraper with intent to commit suicide. Since the requested psychologist has not yet arrived, Eisner's daughter of the same age manages to talk to her. In her "cold-blooded" way she manages to get closer to her. Eisner also learns that Bianka Kubek is pregnant from Jakobi. She is an active sport swimmer and her championship is now in jeopardy.

Eisner suspects Kubek, who obviously did not agree with his daughter's relationship with Jakobi, of murdering Jakobi. His wife gives him an alibi for the time of the crime, but he also has a hunting rifle. While he was being interrogated in the presidium late in the evening, Christine Schwarz was knocked down in the company. She found that someone had repeatedly accessed the secret documents in the PC system. Since the last access must have just happened, she wants to look and is now surprised by the spy.

During all investigations, Eisner keeps in touch with industrial psychologist Carina Relf. She knows details in the company and the workforce, which is useful in his work. For a short time she is even suspected of being the spy, but this does not come true. This is how Eisner Jakobi's secretary Karin Hartl finds out. She bought a conspicuous number of company shares after they fell sharply because of the death of Jakobi and the espionage rumors. She admits that she was contacted by a foreign competitor a few months ago to pass on the research to them. When her boss saw this, he was furious, but she didn't kill him.

Eisner's attention is drawn to Heinrich Beier, Kubek's chauffeur, through a photo. He takes care of his entire family including his daughter. So he could not bear the fact that Jakobi made Bianca unhappy, and he testifies: "Somebody had to put an end to it." The hunting rifle in his home is seized as a murder weapon, and Beier is arrested.

background

The filming of the Viennese film production company Cult Movies took place in cooperation with Degeto Film in Vienna .

reception

Audience ratings

6.60 million viewers saw the episode Deadly Trust in Germany when it was first broadcast on May 14, 2006, which corresponded to a market share of 20.0%. In the crime scene blog, the episode reached 594th place out of a possible 906.

Reviews

Kino.de thinks that this time the ORF is offering an "entertaining thriller [with] acting quality."

Moviepilot.de, on the other hand, assesses this episode as “A crime scene that redefines boredom. A very run-of-the-mill action is implemented with such low-tension images and camera work as garnished with jazz-heavy sleep music that the viewer's greatest challenge is staying awake. The whole atmosphere and the sometimes antiquated costume make the scene of the crime visually age by at least 5 years, but in any case not look like 2006. "There was a positive rating for the acting performance, because" the largely strong cast can [...] at least there is still a lot to tear out and the story remains a minimum of suspense. The usual side notes [...] do not always fit and less would have been more here. ”In summary, the following is assessed:“ The viewer who stays awake until the end can look forward to a minimal surprise effect at the end, the dry one Sleep composition acts like fireworks. The otherwise annoying side story, about the private life of the inspector, even enriches this crime scene ... that alone is also significant. "

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Production details from the Internet Movie Database , accessed December 17, 2013.
  2. Location on imdb.com, accessed December 17, 2013.
  3. ↑ Audience rating on tatort-fundus.de, accessed on December 17, 2013.
  4. Tatort ranking list on tatort-blog.de, accessed on December 17, 2013.
  5. ^ Film review at kino.de, accessed on December 17, 2013.
  6. Film review on moviepilot.de, accessed on December 17, 2013.