The scenario:

Chechen gangsters in the money laundering, BKA-Scheusale on heroin - and in the middle of it two criminal investigators who want to forget all the worries when skydiving. Of course it does not work out: After the murder of a secretary investigate Lürsen (Sabine Postel) and Stedefreund (Oliver Mommsen) in a real estate development company, which works with drug money of the Chechen mafia. In this way, they get in the way of addicted BKA officials who want to participate in the illegal flow of money. The fact that Stedefreund shares a secret with the junkie cops makes things extra complicated.

The clou:

Jump, crash, departure. After the bright entrance at the open door of a sports plane, the two investigators fall into a particularly brutal case and are again confronted with culpable entanglements from Stedefreund's past. High-speed thriller in self-destruct mode.

The picture:

A bowl with the murky contents of the stomach of the victim, in it: corn and rice grains. The lawyer cheeky: "I'm typing in Mexican." A little later, Mariachi brass sounds very funny, as in a fast food advertisement.

The dialogue:

"What's that?" Asks a Chechen gangster henchman as he opens the trunk of a car. Reply from the boss: "That's Harit, he talked to the cops, I already disposed of my head, arms and legs, can you take care of the rest?"

The song:

"Habibi" by Tamino. This fatalistic musical greeting from the highly-traded Belgian-Egyptian songwriter is heard as it becomes clear how far Stedefreund has become entangled in a web of guilt and lies. No way out in sight.

The review:

9 out of 10 points. After 39 cases with Lürsen and 35 with Stedefreund: a farewell the hard way, deaths are not excluded.

The analysis:

Please continue reading here!

"Crime Scene: Where was my sweetheart", Easter Monday, 20:15

photo gallery


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Photo gallery: All "Tatort" teams at a glance