Ruhrpott cult film
Ralf Richter wants to continue “bang boom bang” as a series
Copy the current link
Add to the memorial list
The crook “Bang Boom Bang” was a huge success more than 25 years ago. Now actor Ralf Richter wants to revive his role “Kalle Grabowski”.
Actor Ralf Richter wants to continue the cult film “Bang Boom Bang” as a series after more than 25 years. He is already working on a script, said the actor at an event in Dortmund.
Richter had played the prisoner “Kalle Grabowski” in the 1999 Ruhrpott film. “My son came up with the good idea: let’s turn something like Bang Boom Bang. Then we sat down, Max and the director Özgür Arslan and we then wrote endlessly for a long time,” said Richter in a talk format of the Hohensyburg Mercury in Dortmund.
Ralf Richter plans “Bang Boom Bang” as a mini series
A film is difficult to finance, so the first version was rejected-and now write to a mini series, said Richter: “We are already very far. Judge promises: “In any case, it has become a funny story.”
Balla, darling Kreuzberg and Stoever: that was Manfred Krug
It was five years ago that Manfred Krug died at the age of 79. The actor and singer was one of the most popular artists in Germany for several decades and had successful life in both parts of the country. Born in Duisburg, he moved to the GDR just founded as a twelve -year -old with his father. Until his departure in 1977 he was popular as a singer and actor. In the west largely unknown, after moving into the FRG, he built up a new career in no time: as an actor, he succeeded in the ARD evening series “on axis” and in the “Liebling Kreuzberg” lawyer’s series. From 1984 to 2001, together with Charles Brauer, he formed one of the most popular “crime scene” duos of all time: Stoever and Brockmöller. Krug was married to Ottilie Krug for more than half a century, from 1963 until his death, the couple has three children together.
© picture Alliance
More
Open the image subtitle
Back
Further
The original “Bang Boom Bang-A Maintaining Ding” was the breakthrough for director Peter Thorwarth in 1999, who later even landed a world hit with the Netflix horror film “Blood Red Sky”. Together with “What does not fit, it is made fit” (2002) and “Golden Times” (2006) formed “Bang Boom Bang” the so-called Unna trilogy, which small people from the Ruhr area and their everyday worries set a cinematic monument.
dpa
Source: Stern

I am an author and journalist who has worked in the entertainment industry for over a decade. I currently work as a news editor at a major news website, and my focus is on covering the latest trends in entertainment. I also write occasional pieces for other outlets, and have authored two books about the entertainment industry.