Gentlemen in White Vests
Gentlemen in White Vests | |
---|---|
Directed by | Wolfgang Staudte |
Written by | Horst Wendlandt |
Produced by | Fritz Klotsch Horst Wendlandt |
Starring | Martin Held Walter Giller Heinz Erhardt Mario Adorf |
Cinematography | Karl Löb |
Edited by | Jane Seitz |
Music by | Peter Thomas |
Production company | |
Distributed by | United Artists |
Release date |
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Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | West Germany |
Language | German |
Gentlemen in White Vests (German: Die Herren mit der weißen Weste) is a 1970 German comedy film directed by Wolfgang Staudte and starring Martin Held, Walter Giller and Heinz Erhardt.[1]
It was shot at the Spandau Studios and on location around Berlin at the Olympiastadion, Tempelhof Airport and Charlottenburg.
Plot[]
At the beginning of the film, gangster Bruno Stiegler alias Dandy returns to West Berlin from the United States as a boxing promoter. The boxing business serves him more as a camouflage, however, because soon it turns out that he and his gang want to realize various planned raids. The now retired Judge Zänker has tried in vain to put Dandy behind bars by legal means during his active service. Now he turns the tables with his friends and sister Elisabeth. His old friends and colleagues meet as a men's choir disguised in his home and prove to be a pensioner's gang, taking on Dandy's gang. He succeeds in this by using the ex-con Pietsch as a snitch in Dandy's gang.
Dandy wants to steal the revenue from a Hertha BSC football match from the Olympic Stadium, but Zänker and his gang are faster in doing so. The same is achieved by them with Dandy's attempt to rob dubious businessman Kunkelmann's cash cabinet and clear up the Haase jewellery store during a parade. To make matters more complicated, Zänker's son-in-law Walter, who lives with his daughter Monika in the house near Zänker, works as a criminal inspector with the police and is charged with clearing up these crimes. In fact, Walter's supervisor commissioner, Berg, eventually appears in person at his old friend's house to arrest him. In a conversation under four eyes, Zänker initiates the Commissioner in his motive and method and gains his understanding. So an arrest warrant goes out for Dandy, and Zänker manages, with the help of Pietsch, to cheer all the stolen items to Dandy. Immediately before Dandy's departure, all the predatory material is found in his suitcase. This justifies the appearances for the police, that Dandy actually committed the crimes, and that Dandy is being taken away. In fact, after his retirement, Zänker has finally managed what he has tried to do legally in his profession for a long time in vain.
Cast[]
- Martin Held as Oberlandesgerichtsrat a. D. Herbert Zänker
- Walter Giller as Inspektor Walter Knauer
- Heinz Erhardt as Heinrich Scheller
- Mario Adorf as Dandy Stiegler
- Agnes Windeck as Elisabeth Zänker
- Hannelore Elsner as Susan
- Rudolf Platte as Pietsch
- as Kriminalrat a.D. Otto Sikorski
- Sabine Bethmann as Monika Knauer
- Rudolf Schündler as Diplomingenieur Willy Stademann
- Herbert Fux as Luigi Pinelli
- Siegfried Schürenberg as Kommissar Berg
- Wilhelm von Homburg as Boxer Max Graf
- Otto Graf
- Max Nosseck
References[]
External links[]
- 1970 films
- German-language films
- 1970s crime comedy films
- German crime comedy films
- West German films
- Films directed by Wolfgang Staudte
- Films set in Berlin
- United Artists films
- 1970 comedy films
- Films shot at Spandau Studios
- 1970s comedy film stubs