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Linda Selb (Luise Wolfram, M.), Mads Andersen (Dar Salim) and Liv Moormann (Jasna Fritzi Bauer): We are the new ones.
Photo: Christine Schroeder / Radio Bremen
The scenario:
Team building on the brutal tour. A newborn was kidnapped in a clinic. The body of a young man lies in an industrial plant. And while the audience ponders how one relates to the other, the new homicide squad has to come together. Not at all easy: Liv Moormann (Jasna Fritzi Bauer) is not even officially hired, but always pushes her way through the investigation. Linda Selb (Luise Wolfram), the slightly autistic BKA investigator who has already worked under the old Bremen inspector Inga Lürsen, is fighting in vain for a career jump. Only the Danish colleague Mads Andersen (Dar Salim), who ended up on the Weser for reasons that are not yet fully understood, shows fewer professional ambitions. He wants to go back to Copenhagenbut misses one move after the other in the continuous examinations.
The highlight:
Generation change in Bremen.
After the old left correctness was cultivated in the Weser "crime scenes" with Boomer Commissioner Sabine Postel, the millennials who are now moving up are switching to careerism.
In the mockumantery “How To Tatort”, which is available in the ARD media library, there are some funny insights into the process of finding the newcomer.
The picture:
Inspector Selb leans forward on the ledge of an industrial plant, spits into the abyss and gives a long whistle: "This was the departure ... 23 ... Batsch!"
Empathy is different.
The dialogue:
The investigation team at the possible crime scene:
Andersen: "Are seldom real brains that kill."
Selb: »Yes, unfortunately. A little more brain in the perpetrator would be more of a challenge. "
The song:
"Donuts" from Gzuz.
The chief terrier of the Hamburg street gang 187 can be heard when Inspector Andersen takes a junkie in a social housing apartment.
Gzuz yelps: "Junky quarters look like the Walking Dead is going on there / mothers throw their custody further away than a quarterback."
The review:
6 out of 10 points.
Fast, cool and sometimes a bit too streamlined: the complete renovation of the Bremen »Tatort« has lost a bit of the rustic, experimental charm of yesteryear.
The analysis:
Read on here!
"Tatort: Newborn",
Whit Monday (!), 8.15 p.m., Das Erste