Two noses fill up super
Movie | |
---|---|
Original title | Two noses fill up super |
Country of production | Germany |
original language | German |
Publishing year | 1984 |
length | 92 minutes |
Age rating | FSK 6 |
Rod | |
Director | Dieter Pröttel |
script |
Thomas Gottschalk , Mike Krüger |
production | Karl Spiehs |
music | Drafi German |
camera | Franz Xaver Lederle |
cut |
Susan Berthel-Ying , Claudia Wutz |
occupation | |
|
Zwei Nasen tanken Super is a German comedy film from 1984 with Mike Krüger and Thomas Gottschalk . The film is a sequel to Die Supernasen , also with Gottschalk and Krüger.
action
Tommy and Mike, once again without a job and without money, are looking for a public toilet at an automobile exhibition and are promptly listed as 100,000. Visitors honored.
The main prize is two trikes , plus a stack of hamburger vouchers and camping equipment. What neither of them know, however: The night before, two world-famous gemstones, the “tiger's eyes”, were stolen from an adjoining museum and hidden in the decoration of the trikes.
So the two of them set off for Austria, not realizing the value of their trikes. On the way they take two hitchhikers with them: Tommy, an artist who wants to go to her circus in Villach , and Mike, a nurse who works in Klagenfurt . As a farewell, the two girls each receive a gemstone from their admirers, which is precisely those priceless "tiger eyes".
The crooks, who of course want their stones back, stay on their heels and there are some turbulent car chases.
backgrounds
The film title is an allusion to the distinctive noses of the two main actors as well as the film Die Supernasen , which Gottschalk and Krüger had previously made together. Together with the pirate channel Powerplay and Die Einsteiger , they are also referred to as the four super noses films. With 6.6 million moviegoers, Zwei Nasen fanken Super was the most successful of these.
Jürgen von der Lippe as a hamburger restaurant manager, Otto Retzer as a hospital patient, Hans-Werner Olm as a moderator at the exhibition, Dagmar Berghoff as the news anchor and Anthony Powell as an artist have made short guest appearances . The Austrian film producer Karl Spiehs , who played the gang boss, allowed himself to be dubbed - this task was carried out by Thomas Reiner . As in the previous film, Thomas Gottschalk's then wife Thea Gottschalk had a small supporting role.
Since Thomas Gottschalk was advertising the fast food chain McDonald’s at that time , the story kept revolving around this company. Although it was not named, there is an extensive scene in which hamburgers are named in McDonald's fashion.
Except for the opening sequence and the later scene in the Grünwalder Stadium , the film was shot in Austria. The location of the opening sequence of the film is the BMW Museum in Munich. In Austria, the old casino in Velden served as the backdrop for the hamburger restaurant. The Werzer Bad on the northern bank of the Wörthersee was also used as a filming location. The accident hospital in Klagenfurt served as the hospital . The furniture store is actually a real furniture store on the east exit of Klagenfurt and is still there today (slightly changed).
Reviews
“Continuation of the super-nose howler, this time as an escape road movie. The stupid duo Gottschalk / Krüger is not too bad for any platitude that the script gives them to; cinematic crash into the cinema of the Adenauer era. - Scoring: Flop "
Web links
- Two noses fill up super in the Internet Movie Database (English)
swell
- ↑ Roman Schliesser: The super nose. Karl Spiehs and his films , Verlag Carl Ueberreuter, Vienna 2006, p. 56
- ↑ Travel report on the locations ( memento of the original from February 23, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. on supernasen-fans.de , accessed on October 4, 2012
- ^ Adolf Heinzlmeier, Berndt Schulz: Lexicon "Films on TV" . Rasch and Röhring, Hamburg 1990, p. 965, ISBN 3-89136-392-3