Soccer. Willi Kuckuck wants to save his club. He uses all sorts of fictitious tricks for this. Until the end of the whole dizziness flies up.Soccer. Willi Kuckuck wants to save his club. He uses all sorts of fictitious tricks for this. Until the end of the whole dizziness flies up.Soccer. Willi Kuckuck wants to save his club. He uses all sorts of fictitious tricks for this. Until the end of the whole dizziness flies up.
Photos
Klaramaria Skala
- Frau Staatsanwalt
- (as Klara M. Skala)
Andrea Brix
- Braut Putzi
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAfter principal photography some scenes of this movie had to be re-dubbed. Since Heinz Erhardt suffered a stroke he couldn't re-dub his scenes. Klaus Havenstein was used instead for these scenes.
- ConnectionsEdited into Legenden: Heinz Erhardt (2005)
Featured review
This could almost have been a German entry into the fabulous 'Carry On' series (one of the 'contemporary' outings of course), although I suppose the title is silly enough as it is. When the credits mention the story is based on a 'famous play' by F. Setz und J. Becker called "Die Eintagsehe" you know most of the action will probably be situated around one location. However director Werner Jacobs manages to postpone the inevitable for a long time by concentrating on the many different hustles Willi is pulling all over town.
The first scene immediately sets the tone with a bunch of Germans screaming at each other at a town meeting. The loudest offender is Willi Kuckuck (Heinz Erhardt), who's main goal is to keep the local football club up and running. He will do anything for his team, although fortunately the film does not dwell on their rigged matches for too long. Instead we are treated to the various ways Willi sets about exploiting his own family (we just love to laugh at a-moral con men don't we).
Several of Willi's schemes involve trick photography. He gets the boyfriend of one of his daughters to help him out, which is strange since the lad routinely has to fake his own girlfriend's "wedding picture" with more boring men than himself. This is all part of Willy's grand plan to receive a wedding present in the form of a blank check from his wealthy sister Elvira who lives in Brazil. For a man who thinks of everything it is a bit strange that Willi never contemplated Elvira might decide to visit in person.
Now Herr Kuckuck has to get some more tangible evidence. He rounds up both the real and the fake prospective son in laws, as well as a new born baby for old Elvira's arrival. When sister dear decides to stay the night the movie at long last reveals it's stage bound trappings and does not venture outside again. Even the all important football team is almost completely forgotten at this stage.
4 out of 10
The first scene immediately sets the tone with a bunch of Germans screaming at each other at a town meeting. The loudest offender is Willi Kuckuck (Heinz Erhardt), who's main goal is to keep the local football club up and running. He will do anything for his team, although fortunately the film does not dwell on their rigged matches for too long. Instead we are treated to the various ways Willi sets about exploiting his own family (we just love to laugh at a-moral con men don't we).
Several of Willi's schemes involve trick photography. He gets the boyfriend of one of his daughters to help him out, which is strange since the lad routinely has to fake his own girlfriend's "wedding picture" with more boring men than himself. This is all part of Willy's grand plan to receive a wedding present in the form of a blank check from his wealthy sister Elvira who lives in Brazil. For a man who thinks of everything it is a bit strange that Willi never contemplated Elvira might decide to visit in person.
Now Herr Kuckuck has to get some more tangible evidence. He rounds up both the real and the fake prospective son in laws, as well as a new born baby for old Elvira's arrival. When sister dear decides to stay the night the movie at long last reveals it's stage bound trappings and does not venture outside again. Even the all important football team is almost completely forgotten at this stage.
4 out of 10
- Chip_douglas
- May 22, 2004
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Willi Manages the Whole Thing
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 24 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was Willi wird das Kind schon schaukeln (1972) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer