Squeaking tires and roaring engines: unusual for a “crime scene”. What some found a welcome change was unbearable for others.
What the average eight and a half million “Tatort” viewers saw on Sunday evening was “something different” – most t-online readers agree on that. “It was like ‘The Fast and the Furious’,” Svenja and Lars Hendricks firmly. Some welcomed the thematic foray into the autotuning scene, others were repelled.
“Never again Bremen-‘Tatort'”
“That was a successful ‘Tatort’ from Bremen with a brilliant Luisa Böse as Marie and an equally successful acting performance by Jasna Fritzi Bauer as Liv,” says Klaus bilz.
Michael Lovely claims the opposite: “The cast was a meaningless zero number without charisma and charisma. The acting of this crime thriller was underground, a total miscast. I switched off after 20 minutes. Never again Bremen-‘Tatort’.”
“Repulsive and oppressive”
They will nabilla didn’t last long either: “I had to switch off the ‘crime scene’ after half an hour. It was repulsive and oppressive. The indistinct mumbling of the actors was unbearable.”
“We found the film exciting, precisely because of the topic of the tuning scene,” writes Tina Zahn. “It was a ‘crime scene’ for people with petrol running through their veins. It took a bit of expertise to be able to put yourself in the shoes of the protagonists. The noise of the go-kart track immediately put the smell of rubber abrasion in my nostrils.”
Renate Hillesheim on the other hand, she can’t stand the milieu of “auto posers,” as she reveals. “I really had to bring myself to keep looking anyway. There was tension, but I still only liked it mediocre.”
“There doesn’t always have to be a lot of blood flowing”
Jens Leopold was impressed by the actors, but he found the script abysmal. “The many effects, changes in camera perspectives and wild cuts didn’t help either. It didn’t look authentic at all.”
“You should give the team a chance,” he said Robin will see. “The story was interesting. You had to look carefully, but it was just something different. Lots of liters of blood don’t always have to flow.”