“Tatort” tonight: This is how the new case “Life Death Ecstasy” will be

“Tatort” from Frankfurt
Psychedelic drug thriller with Janneke and Brix

The Frankfurt “Tatort” commissioners Paul Brix (Wolfram Koch) and Anna Janneke (Margarita Broich) question Adrian Goser (Martin Wuttke, left) in his villa

© HR/Bettina Müller / ARD

Frankfurt “Tatort” inspectors Janneke and Brix are investigating a psychiatrist who uses LSD for therapeutic purposes. After one session, six people are dead, but the doctor doesn’t want to remember anything.

  • 3 out of 5 points
  • Intoxicating chamber play with an outstanding Martin Wuttke

What is the “crime scene” from Frankfurt about?

Frankfurt inspectors Anna Janneke (Margarita Broich) and Paul Brix (Wolfram Koch) find not one, but six bodies when they are called to the villa of psychiatrist Adrian Goser (Martin Wuttke). “It seems to have been a wild party,” Brix suspects, while his colleague Janneke thinks it’s more like “a massacre.” In fact, Goser uses the controversial method of psycholysis, in which he treats his “companions”, as he calls his patients, with psychedelic drugs. At a meeting something went terribly wrong: six people are dead, Goser is the only survivor. During a crime scene inspection in his house, the psychoanalyst is supposed to reconstruct the events of the evening. But the mission goes completely out of control and there are more deaths.

Why is the “Life Death Ecstasy” case worthwhile?

The film is primarily supported by the eccentric psychiatrist Adrian Goser. Theater star Martin Wuttke plays him as a kind of cynical guru whose emotions constantly fluctuate: sometimes he’s gentle and understanding, sometimes loud and short-tempered. The screenwriters Nikias Chryssos and Michael Comtess have created a multi-faceted character that Wuttke brilliantly fills with life. The 60-year-old is no stranger to the “crime scene” world: from 2008 to 2015, Wuttke investigated alongside Simone Thomalla in Leipzig. In addition, he and the “Frankfurt” commissioner Margarita Broich were a couple for many years and have two sons together.

What bothers?

The film jumps back and forth on different time levels. This doesn’t create a real narrative flow. What happened in the past and on the night of death in Goser’s villa comes out only in bits and pieces. Towards the end, the thriller loses more and more of its structure. The viewer feels as if they themselves are part of one of Goser’s psychedelic sessions. And above all there is the bizarre question of Arnold Schwarzenegger’s favorite film.



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The commissioners?

When Janneke and Brix find out that they are dealing with a psychoanalyst in their investigation, their reactions are very different. While Brix condemns psycholysis as “nonsense” and can’t take it all seriously, his colleague is quite interested and admits that she has already read some of the suspect Adrian Goser’s books. This causes controversial discussions among the commissioners, but in the end there is a surprising reconciliation over beer.

Turn on or off?

“Life Death Ecstasy” is the title of the “crime scene” from Frankfurt. In addition, there are crazy drug trips and morbid delusions: If all this is not too much for you on a Sunday evening, you are welcome to tune in.

The Frankfurt Commissioners Anna Janneke and Paul Brix also investigated these cases:

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