Wiesbaden crime scene: Criticism of historical mistakes in the new thriller!
Wiesbaden crime scene: Criticism of historical mistakes in the new thriller!
In a new "crime scene" from Wiesbaden, the audience experiences an unexpected journey through time - but the joy lasts short! The episode, which was broadcast on October 20, revolves around 1944 and brings some annoying historical mistakes to the surface. Actor Ulrich Tukur shines as Commissioner Felix Murot, but the authenticity of the plot shaks.
The thriller entitled "Murot and the 1000-year-old Reich" shows the investigation by Murot and his assistant Magda Wächter against the war criminal Hagen von Strelow. At the same time, a murder case from the Second World War is examined - a pilot whose death is clarified by Colonel Friedrich Rother and the young Strelow. A drama that plays in a Hessian village should be exciting, but many viewers are disappointed!
history or fiction?
Although the episode attracted 6.24 million viewers in front of the screens, some shake their heads over historical inaccuracies. The Humboldt University in Berlin is mentioned in the "crime scene"-but in 1944 the institution was not yet called that, but Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität, a shocking omission for a history drama!
The reactions of the audience are clear. "I think the film is simply failed," criticizes a viewer on X. "There are too many mistakes, and that with the Humboldt University was only the most striking." Another criticizes: "Simple historical mistakes that could be saved", while a third viewer adds that such massive errors simply ruin the action. Instead of a captivating thriller, there was only frustration for many - and the question: What is more important, the truth or entertainment?
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Ort | Wiesbaden, Deutschland |
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