Werner - puke later!
Movie | |
---|---|
Original title | Werner - puke later! |
Country of production | Germany |
original language | German |
Publishing year | 2003 |
length | 76 minutes |
Age rating | FSK 6 |
Rod | |
Director |
Michael Schaack , Hayo Friday |
script |
Rötger Feldmann , Andi Feldmann |
production |
Bernd Eichinger , Jan-Michael Brandt , Herman Weigel |
music | JP Genkel |
cut | Sascha Wolff |
Werner - puke later! is the fourth Werner film from 2003.
action
The film begins on a campsite on a beach in Corsica, where Werner, as in the first film Werner - Beinhart! becomes the commentator of a "soccer game" created by a little boy. Werner's fictitious “teams” TuS Isomatte against 1. FC Chemoklo “play” 2: 2 in the end.
Finally, Werner, Andi and Eckat are shown throwing the dice, more precisely at the Meier (Mäxchen) dice game , where they remember the good times in Corsica. Werner wins the dice game, is named "King" (with a bathrobe as a robe, a self-made crown made from a cornflake packaging and a fly swatter as a scepter) and gives the order and destination to go to Corsica to make "flat bodies" . Eckat wants to object that he and Werner actually have to go to work, but Andi changes his mind by filling him with alcohol.
After the trio spent the night in a field after the journey began, Eckat complains again that he should actually be at work. In order to calm him down, Werner and Andi make him king for a short time. The three friends drive on with their Ford Taunus until the car breaks down in a small town. Eckat then discovers an Oldsmobile Regency 98, built in 1975, on the side of the road. Werner manipulates a mentally disturbed patient in the front yard of a psychiatric hospital who makes "his" car available to Eckat, although the Oldsmobile belongs to the psychiatric doctor, who of course immediately notices the theft.
Various inconveniences during the trip, such as the collision with a boundary stone, contribute significantly to the fun: Andi and Werner not only repaired the Oldsmobile during the compulsory break after the collision with the boundary stone, but also greatly improved it. Thus, do not notice the guys when they continue to occur during a full throttle tests on an extremely tuned Golf Cabrio a Popper clique mount up and this then on the highway putting it to the Swiss border in front of him. A visit to a Bavarian monastery brewery should also be mentioned, where Eckat's loyalty to Master Röhrich disappears (Eckat wanted to “help the master home” beforehand). When they arrive in Corsica, they finally do three “flat bodies” and then go back home.
While the three of them are on the road, Röhrich and the architect Hüpenbecker have to cope with the work alone. Of course, this cannot happen without disasters. Initially, the two of them are working for Ms. Gloer. Röhrich is about to drill through a wall and suddenly meets Frau Gloer's dog with the drill on the other side. Röhrich believes that he has “imbalance”, instead he whirls the dog back and forth by further drilling, unsuspecting. Finally he pulls the drill out of the wall, the dog whirls through the air and "bursts" like a paint bomb on a picture. The residues on the drill lead Hüpenbecker to suspect that Röhrich has drilled through a drainpipe, which he wants to close again by soldering. But when examining the hole on the other side, Röhrich lets the burner run and sets the apartment on fire.
Later, a gutter is to be repaired on an apartment building. When parking in front of the house, Röhrich uses his Hanomag to move the scaffolding of a painter who was about to paint the year of the Frisian uprising, 1871, on the house wall. As a result, the year 1874 is on the house wall at the end, and Röhrich makes fun of the painter's alleged lack of knowledge of history. While Röhrich and Hüpenbecker are working on the gutter, the replacement pipe falls into the painter's paint bucket and splatters him and the wall behind him with blue paint. Annoyed, the painter begins to shake the ladder, causing Röhrich to lose his balance and try to save himself by jumping from the ladder onto the scaffolding. But this loosens under Röhrich's momentum from the screw connection in the house wall and threatens to tip over. Meanwhile, the painter falls from the scaffolding into a bucket of white paint. Hüpenbecker manages to throw a hose to Röhrich and wants to pull it and the scaffolding back up. But at that moment the church tower clock strikes eleven thirty, Hüpenbecker looks at the clock and lets go of the hose. In a desperate attempt to save himself, Röhrich pulls Hüpenbecker, with a rope wrapped around his ankle, from the roof. As if hanging on a bungy rope, Hüpenbecker falls down and is catapulted back up just above the painter's paint bucket. In the end, the remaining paint buckets fall from the scaffolding onto the painter, who Röhrich insults as “stupid August”.
Stylistic devices
You throw up later! is a road movie in which Werner, Andi and Eckat drive from north to south through the landscapes of the Ruhr, Hesse, Bavaria, Swabia and Swiss regions. The film integrates the dialectal peculiarities of those regions into the action. Heinz Schenk , for example, can be heard as the dubbing voice of a quirky Hessian gas station lady.
synchronization
role | speaker |
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Werner | Klaus Büchner |
Eckard | Kulle Westphal |
Andi / Master Röhrich | Andi Feldmann |
Mrs. Hansen / Mrs. Gloer | Lilo Wanders |
Herbert | Michael Lott |
Hüpenbecker (Hüpi) | Thomas Struck |
monk | Gustav Adolph Artz |
President / Bruno | Bertram Hiese |
tube | Rötger Feldmann |
Swiss customs officer | Emmanuel Peterfalvi |
Petrol station granny | Heinz Schenk |
teller | Otto Sander |
Reviews
“Fourth part of the meanwhile anachronistic silly cartoon series about the North German plumber figure. Without timing, but with all the more disgusting gags, the story struggles with worn-out beer and chub romance over time. "
Web links
- The official Werner page
- Werner - puke later! in the Internet Movie Database (English)
- Werner - puke later! in the online film database
- Werner - puke later! at Filmportal.de
Individual evidence
- ↑ Werner - puke later! In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed March 2, 2017 .