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"Hard on the Border" was the name of the first "crime scene" in Stuttgart, where Bootz and Lannert met. For ten years now, they have formed a team, 22 missions that they have already completed.
The Stuttgarter "crime scene" is celebrating its tenth anniversary this year.
With the episode "The man who lies", which can be seen Sunday at 8:15 pm in the ARD, the two curators Thorsten Lannert (Richy Müller) and Sebastian Bootz (Felix Klare) consult 22 data from SWR, directed by 15 directors. Some ideas behind the scenes:
CLOTHING: Commissar Bootz is best known for his brown leather jacket. And it's actually the same thing for ten years, as revealed by a SWR spokeswoman. "She fits him so well that she is always saved from oblivion."
AUTO: As the leather jacket at Bootz heard a vintage brown Porsche car from his colleague Lannert. Depending on the station, the car is not as easy to maintain as the jacket – and it took an hour or so in the workshop.
PRISONS: Prisons (JVA) play a role again and again. The shooters record holds the "Freigang" shooters with ten days of shooting in prison. In Stuttgart-Stammheim prison, however, is not rotated, reveals the transmitter. In this case, the team was in a prison near Göttingen in Lower Saxony. And: For the historic scenes of Stammheim in "The Red Shadow", the cells of the prisoners of the RAF were recreated.
DREHTAGE: According to the broadcaster, the number of days of shooting in prison on the "crime scene" of Stuttgart is limited to three or four maximum. A total of 24 shooting days per crime scene is the rule, sometimes one less.
STUTTGART: Although the city can be seen again and again, it is often filmed elsewhere. In "traffic jam", for example, the audience felt in the middle of the chaos of traffic in the city. In fact, the Stuttgart Weinsteige was rebuilt in an exhibition hall of Freiburg.
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