• 4 months ago
Transcript
00:00Katja really wants to celebrate in the nursery.
00:03And I'm putting her life in danger.
00:05I know. Tell her.
00:07That's not possible. She cancelled another wedding because of us.
00:11So, friends?
00:13I can't help it.
00:17I thought you weren't sure about this Harzfeld-Winter.
00:20Meeting her alone and talking to her about this database is awesome.
00:24Hoppla.
00:30I'm worn and painted by the sun
00:32And it's in my eyes
00:34And it's in my eyes
00:38Caught by the rapture of the dawn
00:40And a restless sky
00:42And a restless sky
00:47This is my life
00:51This is the way to find my own
00:55This is my life
00:58This is the world where I belong
01:04I'm rolling on
01:06I'm rolling on
01:28Oh, God.
01:33Was that your patient?
01:35Patient? That was her.
01:37What do you mean?
01:40That was Prof. Dr. Dr. Regina Harzfeld-Winter.
01:44Excuse me?
01:46The Harzfeld-Winter?
01:48This Cory Fae?
01:50The one you're talking about all the time?
01:53Yes.
01:54Maybe she's going to run a new clinic?
01:57Shit.
02:08I feel sick.
02:12The last speech I gave
02:15was for my colleague's 40th anniversary.
02:19From Buchholz.
02:21His name is Karl Heinz.
02:23Oh.
02:26For every letter of his name
02:28I quoted a healing herb.
02:31For example, K like Camille
02:33or A like Anise.
02:35And with that, I got the curve
02:38to his peculiarities and hobbies.
02:41That was very well received at the time.
02:43Well, I'd like to believe that.
02:45But I'd rather avoid this kind of
02:47pharmacist humor
02:49when talking about a bride's father.
02:51Especially with the name Katja
02:54or Anise.
02:56You could vary that.
02:58With Artichoke, Agave or Akelai.
03:05It seems important to me
03:07that the speech is very personal.
03:10You can do it.
03:12And no shaking, I know.
03:16Did any of you happen to see my car keys?
03:19Yes, here.
03:21Ah, thank you.
03:23I'll take them to the atelier.
03:28May I ask
03:30what I deserve this proof of love for?
03:33That you gave Philipp
03:35your beloved typewriter.
03:37I know that you two
03:39didn't have an easy start.
03:41Relationships with easy start-ups
03:44often last the longest.
03:46Besides, it was pure calculation.
03:49I expect
03:51in Philipp's book
03:53the dedication
03:54to Achim Meisner, my father-in-law.
03:58It's a deal, I promise.
04:02Will this be the speech for my wedding?
04:05Just a few keywords.
04:07The actual text is already under pressure here.
04:11So you don't have to
04:13praise me, Papa.
04:16I know how my old man feels about me.
04:19But the rest of the world
04:21can experience it, too.
04:23As you wish.
04:25Ciao.
04:26Bye.
04:28Bye, Erika.
04:38Well, a wedding speech
04:40isn't something you hear every day.
04:50Oh.
04:51Ah, here you are.
04:53You look like a page
04:55in your first year of university.
04:58Alfred Albers is starting his
05:00well-deserved term,
05:01and that's three minutes past the hour.
05:03That's the number of bottles of
05:05Lago-Marie we still have in the wine cellar.
05:07And I don't want to start
05:09with Champagne and Saint-Esteve.
05:10That's what I'm trying to explain to you
05:12all day long.
05:13But obviously I haven't found an ear.
05:16But how am I supposed to
05:18sort out a stone?
05:20I mean, normally
05:21Mrs. Fallier always
05:22delivered automatically.
05:23I don't know about that.
05:24By the way, I just told
05:25Mr. Lichtenhagen, too.
05:27Like you told Torben,
05:28that our wine stock
05:29has to be replenished?
05:30But he obviously
05:31didn't find an ear, either.
05:33Then I have to call
05:34Mrs. Fallier right away.
05:36I would do that, too.
05:37I mean, she can deliver by express.
05:39After all, we're old customers.
05:40Yes, but it's too stupid
05:41to keep a wine stock alive.
05:43Yes, if the left doesn't know
05:45what the right does.
05:46Bye.
05:48Bye.
05:58How am I supposed to stand there?
06:01I would say, as a young woman
06:03with a certain sexual elan,
06:06which in choosing her partner
06:08has shown an excellent taste.
06:10Ben, that's not funny.
06:12The woman will most likely
06:13be the new head of the clinic.
06:14Most likely.
06:15So, wait and stay cool.
06:18What would you say
06:19if you could find a couple
06:20in a clear pose
06:21in one of your wind turbines?
06:23That can't happen to me.
06:25I'm unemployed.
06:26If? Ben, if?
06:28If, then I would probably
06:30pull back a little
06:31and treat them with all my heart.
06:34Yes, and I pull back
06:35the question with it.
06:39Have you ever thought about
06:40that the woman may not have
06:41figured out
06:42who she caught the head of?
06:44She probably thought
06:45you were a nurse or something.
06:46Yes, but she will realize that
06:47when she starts working for us
06:48and becomes my boss.
06:50Okay.
06:51But still,
06:52I would wait and see.
06:55You don't get it, do you?
06:57Even if the woman
06:58doesn't come to Lüneburg,
06:59we are in constant contact
07:00with each other
07:01through this data network.
07:02Look, I said my opinion.
07:07Attack is the best defense.
07:11And that means what in plain language?
07:13That means that I find out
07:14where she lives in Lüneburg.
07:15Oh, and what then?
07:17Sherlock Holmes?
07:18Then I go to her
07:19and apologize
07:20for the situation.
07:30Oh, thank you.
07:32What I wanted to ask you
07:33earlier,
07:34how was your snuff course?
07:37My what?
07:38Snuff course.
07:39Hotel hostess
07:40on the side of Flickenschnitt.
07:42It had to be postponed
07:43because we are both witnesses
07:44for Katja and Philipp.
07:46Well, I find that very funny.
07:48At first you were
07:49fighting over this tulip house property
07:51and now you are always
07:52together in the team.
07:55Don't overdo it, auntie.
07:57But I don't want to
07:58deny a certain affinity.
08:00Let's just leave it alone.
08:02Hey, you two.
08:03Your witness has a question for you.
08:09Who would that be?
08:10I know,
08:11your wedding lights
08:12don't want to be disturbed,
08:13but you want to know
08:14where your loved ones are
08:15if something happens.
08:17I don't understand.
08:18Your wedding trip.
08:19Where are you going?
08:21We're not going on a wedding trip.
08:23The move to Stockholm
08:24is still pending.
08:26Not even a long weekend?
08:29Listen,
08:30after all the turbulence,
08:33it's a gift enough
08:34that Philipp and I
08:35are allowed to marry at all.
08:38Modesty is a goal,
08:40you can't go on without it.
08:42Listen,
08:43we can celebrate here
08:44in the nursery.
08:47Your wedding would be
08:48the icing on the cake,
08:49but you can't have everything.
08:51But that's definitely possible.
08:53You can talk to the
08:54registry officer,
08:55can't you?
08:58I have to call Philipp.
09:00He has a good connection
09:01to the registry office.
09:03This Mrs. Rose.
09:06Thank you.
09:10I know you're still
09:11my dream woman,
09:13and you give me
09:14such a charming body
09:15that it almost doesn't hurt
09:16and I could imagine
09:18only being friends with you.
09:20Am I getting old?
09:21No.
09:23Only smarter and wiser.
09:27That's why Brussels chose you
09:28as a quasi-missionary
09:30in Europe.
09:32It's not that easy
09:33to make people
09:34taste Europe.
09:36I'm also looking forward
09:37to our upcoming
09:38citizens' meeting.
09:39You mean the discussion
09:40on the topic
09:41of Lüneburg's middle class
09:42and EU funding?
09:44That's why I get a lot of inquiries.
09:46My website is also
09:47constantly clicked,
09:48like during election times.
09:49That makes me happy.
09:51Are you going to the city hall now?
09:53Well, pregnant or not,
09:55Lüneburg can't be
09:56governed by a website.
09:58Then our paths separate.
10:00Take care.
10:03See you soon.
10:15Mr. van Loon!
10:16Mr. Jansen!
10:18Are you taking the photos
10:19as a tourist or as a businessman?
10:21As a tourist.
10:22But you as a man from Brussels
10:23are just in time.
10:24Really?
10:25Yes.
10:26You're an expert
10:27in EU funding
10:29and I'm a businessman
10:30who's open to new territory.
10:32And how are the two of us
10:33going to get together?
10:35I want this warehouse here.
10:36I think it's ideal for my purposes.
10:39Large warehouses,
10:40centrally located
10:41and as a support point
10:42for upcoming business.
10:44For example, with old tiles.
10:46Old tiles?
10:47Yes, old in the sense of antiquity.
10:50The tiles are quite valuable
10:51and I want to store them
10:52here in Lüneburg.
10:54Yes, the building
10:55has been empty for ages,
10:57but I don't know
10:58what the circumstances are.
10:59It's sad.
11:01Of course, I'm also interested
11:02in the question of empty space.
11:03And?
11:04That's why I'm going
11:05to the foundation office.
11:06The owner is a certain
11:07Johanna Jansen.
11:08You're not related
11:09to the lady, are you?
11:12Johanna Jansen is my mother,
11:13but if the house
11:14belonged to her,
11:15I would know.
11:17Maybe you should start
11:18looking for a copy
11:19of the foundation book.
11:28So, Ella,
11:29how do we get
11:30into the entertainment program?
11:32How does the Indian
11:33celebrate a wedding?
11:34Our parties are gigantic.
11:36Well, tell me about it.
11:39On this day,
11:40little is spared.
11:41Sometimes up to a thousand people
11:42come together
11:43and celebrate for several days.
11:45And which poor sock
11:46has to write the menu for it?
11:48You don't believe me, do you?
11:50Yes, that's right.
11:51I was once
11:52at a Turkish wedding.
11:53There was a wedding
11:54in the middle of the city.
11:56I was once
11:57at a Turkish wedding.
11:58There were over 400 people.
11:59That was a lot.
12:00I felt like I was
12:01at a fashion show
12:02for evening dresses.
12:03Yes, in our country,
12:04the hands and ankles
12:05of the bride are cut off.
12:09Of course not.
12:10They are painted with henna.
12:12Okay.
12:13I don't know
12:14if that's something
12:15for my mother.
12:16Both.
12:17Yes, that's just
12:18supposed to bring luck.
12:19But you just said
12:20something about games
12:21and this thing
12:22about harmony.
12:23Exactly, yes.
12:24I was once
12:25at a wedding.
12:26There was...
12:27Write it down.
12:28A heart was cut out
12:29and then they
12:30went through it
12:31and then they
12:32sawed a tree trunk
12:33and cut the cake
12:34together.
12:35Yes, thank you.
12:36Oh, excuse me.
12:37Yes, then
12:38listen again.
12:39Yes.
12:40So.
12:41So.
12:42The wedding
12:43is cancelled.
12:44Because it
12:45violates
12:46any regulations?
12:47No, it doesn't.
12:48But the civil servant
12:49has to marry
12:50the bride couple
12:51on that day.
12:52There is simply
12:53no time
12:54for a trip
12:55to the nursery.
12:56That would have been
12:57so romantic
12:58with all the flowers.
12:59Yes, well,
13:00but he's booked
13:01until the attack.
13:02It's not possible.
13:03Good and bad.
13:04Wedding,
13:05two in the nursery,
13:06yes.
13:07Marriage, no.
13:08Well, Mr. Meissner.
13:09Are you sitting
13:10on the first page
13:11of your memoir?
13:12Nice to meet you.
13:13I'm Mr. Meissner.
13:14And I'm Mr. Meissner.
13:15And I'm Mr. Meissner.
13:16And I'm Mr. Meissner.
13:17And I'm Mr. Meissner.
13:18And I'm Mr. Meissner.
13:19And I'm Mr. Meissner.
13:20And I'm Mr. Meissner.
13:21And I'm Mr. Meissner.
13:22Are you siting
13:23on the first page
13:24of your memoir?
13:25Nice to meet you.
13:26No,
13:27I sit with
13:28my father & mother.
13:29I feel like
13:30the famous Ox
13:31from the mountains.
13:32That's not easy.
13:33When is your speech
13:34placed in the time span?
13:37Does it start
13:39or does it
13:40just begin?
13:42What role does
13:43that play?
13:44Well,
13:45that is not
13:46really unimportant
13:47because,
13:48I think,
13:49the mood
13:50is always
13:51in time it will be a bit more relaxed
13:53that is important for the points
13:55in the second part you can be a bit more courageous
13:59should I also calculate the alcohol content?
14:07still no idea?
14:11I had hoped that this small change of wallpaper and the people here
14:15would inspire me a bit
14:17I have a rhyme lexicon if you want to have that
14:21no, no, no
14:23well, it is always the question of how to approach something like that
14:27if you do it in a cheerful way or in a pathetic way
14:31or in a historical way
14:33for example
14:35I held this child on my arm
14:378500 grams
14:398500 grams?
14:41Mr. Albers, Katja Meissner did not come to the world as a horse
14:45it was exactly 3256 grams
14:49that made me a father and changed my life
14:53that is the solution
14:55how did Katja change your life?
14:59I don't mean as a baby
15:01but after your long break
15:03during the second attack here in Lüneburg
15:05no
15:07I ended up in prison because of this insatiable Nadine Dorn
15:11as a dangerous drug addict
15:15Katja found out about it in Hamburg
15:17and exchanged the studio with the pharmacy
15:21and got me out of misery
15:25I have got my daughter back
15:29and a wonderful grandchild
15:31and a nice son-in-law
15:33whom I initially treated like a bloodhound
15:35write that down
15:37absolutely
15:39you are right
15:41the knot is broken
15:47yes, I understand
15:49yes
15:51you can't do anything about it
15:53I wish you a good day
15:55anyway
15:57goodbye
15:59can you tell me
16:01what your cryptic and provocative text message should be?
16:03first, according to my phone call just now
16:05my text message is quite moderate
16:07and second
16:09I think you are a bit overwhelmed
16:11with the split between being a lawyer
16:13and being a part of Salto
16:15did Alfred Albers tell you
16:17that our wine stocks
16:19have to be refilled?
16:21maybe he said something
16:23wait
16:25this is not the right catastrophe yet
16:27we have to get rid of both
16:29the Saint-Esteve and the La Gomery
16:33I don't understand
16:35I don't understand
16:37that we have a contract with our wine dealer
16:39that we have to extend every year
16:41and since that didn't happen
16:43our two most popular wines are out of stock
16:45can't we order the wine somewhere else
16:47if this woman
16:49can't deliver?
16:51she is directly buying it
16:53exclusively
16:55let's call her
16:57and tell her we are big fans
16:59you don't understand
17:01she sold out the wine
17:03this is not my fault
17:05you are responsible for the everyday business
17:07I don't think contract extensions
17:09are everyday
17:11they just belong to you
17:13you are responsible for the lorbeeren
17:15and I go diving when the child falls into the well
17:17wrong!
17:19everyone goes diving when the child falls into the well
17:21that's what the contract says
17:23shall we look it up?
17:25come on, don't be serious
17:27yes
17:33are you coming?
17:35yes
17:45excuse me
17:47copy it and send it to the post office
17:49thank you
17:51let me guess
17:53the partner agency doubled your pay
17:55because Thomas Janssen is so hard to get
17:59you know the old warehouse
18:01that has been empty for ages
18:03down at the Ilmenau
18:05yes, of course
18:07do you know anything about this building?
18:09should I?
18:11well, if it's true
18:13it belongs to my mother
18:15you just found out?
18:17I see you understand
18:19my irritation
18:21do you have a spontaneous explanation?
18:23maybe from an unknown
18:25heir
18:27who inherited it
18:29no, no
18:31my mother is always good for a surprise
18:33I'm looking forward to asking her
18:37you look confused
18:39do I have to worry about you as your witness?
18:41Katja and I were thinking
18:43that we should get married in a nursery
18:45that's a wonderful occasion
18:47but I have just found out
18:49that the state officials don't have time
18:51their calendar is full
18:53and what about Anne?
18:55as the mayor, she can marry you
18:57why don't you marry a mayor?
18:59you see, our man in Brussels
19:01not only knows the problems of his citizens
19:03but also the solutions
19:09Dr. Hatz
19:11Professor Hatz
19:15I would like to apologize to you
19:23Dr. Hatz
19:25I'm sorry about yesterday
19:39Professor
19:41Dr. Liege
19:43Dr. Hatz
19:51I don't want to be smart
19:53but this contract is more a
19:55sporadic confession of will
19:57than a list of responsibilities
19:59bad enough?
20:01it only says that we will be able to keep a drawfix once per week
20:04and that you are responsible for the kitchen
20:06you are smarter than me
20:08who started this whole contract thing?
20:11Let's be clear. You forgot to pass on Alfred Alba's information.
20:15That's why we have a wine cellar without wine.
20:17Yes, we've been to this point before, and I've apologized several times.
20:21Yes, but that doesn't solve our problem.
20:23Who told you that I should make a big deal about the kitchen?
20:27Yes, about the kitchen, but not about the wine cellar.
20:29Now don't come to me with your explicit contract.
20:31Carla, we're talking in circles.
20:32I'm not.
20:34Yes, and I also have a lot to do.
20:42But let me know when I can take your wedding agenda from you.
20:45That's up to you, but I have a good plan.
20:47First, the jewelry and the rings.
20:49Ah, Merle.
20:50Hello, Philipp.
20:51I have to say goodbye.
20:53Bye.
20:55Mr. Flickenschild, we have a problem.
20:58We?
20:59Yes, we as a witness team.
21:01Katja and Philipp want to postpone their wedding trip to plan their move instead.
21:06What do you say to that?
21:07From a pragmatic point of view, quite understandable.
21:10Why?
21:11Why?
21:12Mr. Flickenschild, we're talking about a wedding here.
21:15We can't let our guardians disappear between a mountain of moving boxes.
21:20Then we'll give you a free night in the wedding suite of our hotel.
21:24With all the necessary extras.
21:26Getting in between the boxes in the morning?
21:29Not a particularly romantic idea.
21:32No, I think I have a better idea.
21:35Yes, probably with fewer moving boxes, but more romantic.
21:39Right.
21:40And I'm very curious to hear what you have to say.
21:42So, I'll follow you.
22:03So, are we in agreement now?
22:05We need a saw.
22:06And for that, a tree stump.
22:09And a can.
22:11Color.
22:13And, uh, I don't know.
22:15The bakery.
22:16Right, a cake for the wedding.
22:17Exactly.
22:21May I interrupt for a moment?
22:22Yes, if it has to do with mom's wedding.
22:27This is my father-in-law's speech. Do you want to hear it?
22:30Mhm.
23:01Ha, ha, ha.
23:04Mhm.
23:18Uh, and, uh, what does that mean?
23:25I was afraid of that.
23:28Excuse me?
23:30Grandpa, I'm sorry, but your speech is like a, uh,
23:35diya show without diyas.
23:39To fall asleep.
23:40No emotions.
23:43Well, they'll come in the main part.
23:45If until then anyone listens at all.
23:48Do you think so?
23:50Yes.
23:52Yes.
23:56Then I wish you a nice day.
23:59If it's a question of price, Mrs. Jansen, we haven't negotiated yet.
24:03No, we don't have to. Not today and not tomorrow.
24:05The warehouse is unsellable.
24:08And now, please excuse me.
24:11I know I should have announced my visit earlier.
24:14You're welcome.
24:17Oh, Mr. Clark.
24:21So there really are people.
24:24Who was that, mom?
24:25Oh, he wanted to sell me something.
24:29I read it.
24:30Imagine.
24:31Why are you lying to me?
24:33Excuse me?
24:35That wasn't a representative.
24:37That was Vincent van Loon.
24:39And I know exactly what he wanted here.
24:41What are you talking about?
24:43About the fact that a property in the Lüdeburg estate
24:46is registered under the name Johanna Jansen.
24:48And I'm not talking about the Rose House.
24:50And said object Mr. van Loon would like to buy.
24:53So, do you own the registered warehouse?
24:56Yes or no?
24:57And if yes, why don't I know anything about it?
25:00Yes.
25:02The warehouse is mine.
25:05And now I'm going to tell you something.
25:09I don't want to talk about it.
25:13Bastard.
25:23Hey!
25:24Hey!
25:25Hey!
25:26Hey!
25:27Hey!
25:33Hey, hey, hey!
25:34I've tried to hire a few individual workers,
25:38but they only work in Cologne.
25:40It's hard to believe that such a delicate design
25:44will later become such a heavy part
25:47of stone, bronze or something else.
25:50Also in front of the opera house in Stockholm.
25:53In case it calms you down.
25:55Sometimes I don't know either.
25:57But I know that this sketch will get a dedication,
26:00will be framed,
26:02and will be my wedding gift for Philipp.
26:04Oh, that's a nice idea.
26:06Katja!
26:09Ah!
26:11Hello.
26:13So? So?
26:14Is our wedding planner all under control?
26:18Can the wedding take place here?
26:21No, but somehow yes.
26:23Unfortunately, the state official has no time at all.
26:26Only our mayor.
26:28Ms. Anne Lichtenhagen will take us personally to the wedding venue.
26:31Ah!
26:32By virtue of her office, she has the license for the marriage.
26:35I haven't asked her yet, but she's invited anyway.
26:38The man is really good.
26:41I'm starting to notice that too.
26:43Now?
26:45Then my contribution to this wedding will soon be limited to a simple yes.
26:49Not a very insignificant contribution.
26:54Can we pack on in peace now?
26:56Yes, you can. I'll take care of the guest.
26:59And everyone always talks about wedding stress.
27:02The jubilee.
27:03We have to adjust the rings.
27:05Come on.
27:06Can you go on?
27:07Yes, yes, we'll do that.
27:11So?
27:12What are you talking about?
27:15It seems to me that you have come to like it.
27:17Purely wedding-like.
27:19Aunt, there are still two of them.
27:22My better half still has to be baked, cut or knotted, right?
27:26There are already three options.
27:28Ah, you're crazy.
27:29The box too?
27:31Yes, and the staff, yes.
27:36Why did you get the box out of the basement now?
27:39Possible inspiration for our entertainment program.
27:43Let's have a look.
27:48What's up with the cassette?
27:51Mom and I bought it in Thailand from a flying dealer somewhere in 1997.
27:57Best of 1997.
27:59We listened to it the whole trip.
28:03It was on this world tour when you were six years old?
28:06Yes.
28:07On the way I turned seven.
28:09Cute.
28:37Dad was dead.
28:40Mom just postponed my enrollment for a year.
28:45So that we had time to process our grief.
28:50That's how this great journey came about,
28:52which Mom and I have totally welded together.
28:55Until today.
28:57I'm jealous.
28:59Yes.
29:00It was such a sad occasion.
29:02It was a great year.
29:06In India we say,
29:08a mother is like rain for a flower for her child.
29:17How many memories are on this cassette.
29:22Do you know what?
29:24I think it's time to thank the flower for the rain.
29:32How's your mom?
29:34Well, she shouldn't be giving the toilet anymore,
29:36but otherwise she's fine.
29:37But her hand is just dusty.
29:39Of course, nothing serious.
29:41And that you're there for her,
29:43I don't understand.
29:45I don't know what to do.
29:47I don't know what to do.
29:49And that you're there for her,
29:51will certainly speed up the healing process.
29:53I'm her nurse.
29:59Hey, Derek.
30:00Yes, we do.
30:02How are you doing with the preventive care?
30:04Oh, it's great.
30:06It's perfect.
30:07Okay, thank you, Derek.
30:09Bye.
30:13And what's the prototype doing?
30:15The tests are excellent.
30:17It's going very well without me.
30:19Then you don't miss your Windsailer at all?
30:22After the yacht is before the yacht.
30:24You know that.
30:26I'll let the colleagues play around with it until the regatta, and then...
30:29An even better boat will be put on the great Windsailer.
30:33As you wish.
30:34I'm even sure.
30:36I think the next race yacht is already almost finished in your head.
30:40Is that right?
30:41Hey, you know me well.
30:43And is there anything new with you?
30:46The administration director made it clear to me
30:49that he prefers the head of the interior as the head of the clinic.
30:52Yes, but you don't let yourself be impressed by that.
30:54Certainly not.
30:56Can you imagine to continue your research project from here?
31:00If I can even continue my marriage from here with you.
31:04Well, maybe I should quit.
31:06And we're moving together here to my old home.
31:09In Hamburg, safety engineers are certainly sought.
31:12And New York?
31:14Our village.
31:16Well, we miss it, don't we?
31:19Broadway, the offshores, the diner on the corner.
31:23Your Yankees.
31:25Okay, we'll stay in New York.
31:28No, seriously.
31:30Of course we would leave a lot behind.
31:32But we'll wait and see how it goes for you at the hospital.
31:36You're right.
31:38Einstein says,
31:40I'm more interested in the future than the past.
31:43I want to live in her memory.
31:45Or you always have to be at least one WSG ahead in life.
31:50Who was that from? Hemingway?
31:52Almost. Humphrey Bogart.
31:54I didn't even have that in my philosophy studies.
31:56Yes, you see.
32:02This juvenile is really doing a science
32:04on the sale of two wedding rings.
32:06I mean, the question of the ring size still lights me up.
32:08And I'm still allergic to it.
32:10Does the ring finger play an important role in everyday life?
32:14The man was just thorough and understands his business.
32:17Yes, yes.
32:18It's a shame that we couldn't take the rings with us right away.
32:21Tell me.
32:23Is your ring finger really that thick?
32:26Excuse me, please. My ring finger is completely normal.
32:29It's more even.
32:31In every wedding comedy,
32:33there is stress with the wedding rings on the last meters.
32:36Either they're gone,
32:38or they fall down,
32:40or the dog of the coast swallows them,
32:43and then they have to be replaced by a wire.
32:45Ms. Meisner, do you think our wedding is a comedy?
32:48No, of course not.
32:50Everything will work out just fine for us.
32:52Even the sad chapter. I promise you that.
32:56Okay, I'll call our mayor now
32:58and ask her if she dares to trust us.
33:01Of course she does.
33:03Tell me, do you know that you can be quite overbearing sometimes?
33:07Uh-huh.
33:09You mean overbearing, right?
33:13That comes from working with a certain material,
33:17like marble, stone, for example.
33:20Yes, and it also has to be shaped first.
33:37Let's see.
33:57What is this?
33:59It smells like South American food?
34:02Yes.
34:05Locro Argentino?
34:07Yes. Ricco, ricco.
34:09Corn, sausages, pumpkin, everything in there.
34:11Oh, Mitisoro.
34:13How often did we eat this together in South America?
34:16Ask me something easier.
34:18But I found it delicious every evening.
34:26Everything exactly like back then.
34:30You just didn't have the wine back then.
34:36What is this?
34:38A little time travel?
34:40A thank you.
34:42For the best mom in the whole world.
34:52Thank you for always being there for me.
34:55You are.
34:58Dad died back then.
35:04But you just packed our suitcases and showed me how beautiful the world is anyway.
35:14To see you laugh again.
35:17That was the most beautiful thing on the whole trip.
35:22My God, how long has it been?
35:25Almost ten years.
35:27More than half of my life.
35:31Now we won't cry, now we'll laugh.
35:34Yes.
35:36Let's go.
35:38That's what we'll do now.
35:40You did all of this on your own?
35:43I'm not worried about you at all.
35:45You'll get along anywhere in the world.
35:51Bye.
36:03Hello, Carla.
36:11I wanted to apologize to you.
36:14I'm sorry that our argument got out of hand.
36:18And I guess I overreacted a little.
36:21Well, the great diplomacy is no longer my discipline in this life.
36:26So...
36:28Let's not make it worse, okay?
36:32And to avoid such misunderstandings in the future,
36:36I took a closer look at our contract.
36:39Excuse me?
36:41Yes, the point about which we spontaneously got into each other,
36:44was actually not fixed anywhere.
36:46That's why I added a little understatement.
36:49It's of course pro forma,
36:51and we can talk about it and change it again.
36:53You're looking forward to a well-deserved evening,
36:55and instead you have to scribble some paragraphs with me.
36:58It's just a very small paragraph.
37:00Here, paragraph 6.
37:01Responsibility for the conclusion...
37:03Are you totally crazy?
37:06I'm sorry that I'm thinking about
37:08how we'll avoid such misunderstandings in the future.
37:11Are you really so pain-free
37:13when it comes to the separation between private and professional?
37:16You give me a stroke, then a small apology,
37:18and in the blink of an eye you want to give me a passport?
37:28What does that mean?
37:30That means...
37:31that I fortunately still have a waterproof lease for my apartment.
37:35Have a nice evening.
37:43Bye.
38:09Good evening.
38:14Is everything okay?
38:18I just have to catch my breath.
38:24You know, I...
38:26I don't have a good feeling about leaving you alone like this.
38:29Oh, no, no, it's going to be okay.
38:31Don't worry.
38:33I'll take you to the hospital.
38:35Oh, no, that's...
38:37That's out of the question.
38:39No, really.
38:41Not at all.
38:42I'd feel better about it.
38:44If there's nothing else,
38:46I'll bring you back, no matter where you want to go.
38:49If you want to go to this bank.
38:51I promise.
38:53I'll feel really good about it.
38:55Oh, good.
38:59Come on.
39:01I know.
39:02Yes.
39:03It's really...
39:11Bye.
39:41I don't want to be rude,
39:43but your speech has the charm of an anti-fungal cream.
39:47Thank you, Mr. Albers.
39:49That was concrete enough.
39:51What I want to say is,
39:53it's all very correct and historical and painful,
39:56but it's too little feeling.
39:59That means, here was...
40:01One part was...
40:06Mr. Meister, you wanted to hear my honest opinion.
40:10That's good.
40:12Ella basically said the same thing to me.
40:15Yes?
40:17And now?
40:19The wedding is in two days.
40:21Should I perhaps
40:23hold a rhetoric and speech seminar beforehand?
40:27Well...
40:29I'm not a Cicero,
40:31but I have time and I like to stand by your side with advice and action.
40:34And if it's about the football,
40:36it slipped out of my mouth.
40:38Accepted.
40:40Oh, by the way,
40:42if you should have any complaints about this,
40:46tea tree oil helps a lot.
40:48Yes, thank you very much. I have no complaints.
40:50Yes.
40:51So, if I understood you correctly,
40:54Torben wanted to apologize to you
40:56and at the same time make an improvement proposal for the SALTO contract.
40:59Yes, and at the same time is exactly the keyword.
41:03Don't look at me like that.
41:05I'm just trying to understand the problem.
41:07Just think about it.
41:09It's a private moment with Torben.
41:10And then he starts with
41:11you could optimize the contract.
41:12And this and that.
41:13Always this eternal legal German.
41:15The man is a lawyer.
41:17Yes, but I don't start every sentence with
41:19first you dice the onions,
41:21then you turn them slightly.
41:22Carla, you're exaggerating.
41:24Why are we currently only arguing about the topic of work?
41:28Even in Britain.
41:29I wanted to relax a bit,
41:31drink a glass of wine,
41:32enjoy the landscape.
41:34And he always starts with the topic of SALTO II.
41:36We said before, we don't talk about it.
41:39Carla.
41:42Torben is a sensitive,
41:44integral, loving man.
41:46What should I say now?
41:48That you two will never get bored.
41:51Here the somewhat dry kind of Torben
41:53and there the temperament of a Carla Saravacos.
41:57For me it sounds more like a dangerous mixture.
42:01I would rather say an explosive mixture.
42:05Did she really give you flowers?
42:07Yes, a big bouquet.
42:10So if Torben Lichtenhagen gives someone flowers,
42:14a big bouquet, you say?
42:16Yes.
42:17Then you should really make a star behind the date.
42:21The man is really not an inflationary flower giver.
42:25Then he means it seriously.
42:27And from the bottom of his heart.
42:30So, and I don't say anything more about it now.
42:32Besides, I have to go to the office now.
42:34And you?
42:35I do what I always do in such moments,
42:37namely whip egg whites and conjure desserts.
42:40That's really a nice valve,
42:41of which everyone has something.
42:51Bye, Carla.
42:52Bye, Anna.
42:54Bye.
43:03Thank you very much.
43:05It was really very kind of you.
43:07Please tell me how much you paid for the taxi.
43:11No, no, of course you are invited.
43:13But that's not possible.
43:16Ms. Jansen, did something happen?
43:18This young man has certainly dissuaded me from the street.
43:23Well, better said, from a parking bench.
43:25And since you treated my mother so kindly this morning,
43:28I bring you this nice lady.
43:30Very caring.
43:31No, I couldn't just let her sit like that.
43:33Yes, but it was just something from the breast.
43:36That may be, but whether that's the case,
43:38I'd rather have a doctor or a doctor explain it to me.
43:42Thank you very much. I'll take a look at it right away.
43:45I'm at Dr. Thies, in the very best hospital.
43:49So, all the best for you. Goodbye.
43:51Goodbye.
43:52Thank you very much.
43:53Ms. Jansen, how are you feeling now?
43:55Now I'm feeling better.
43:57And I regularly take the medication against the blood poverty.
44:02Sometimes I just feel so...
44:04suddenly so...
44:05so dizzy.
44:07We'll certainly do an ECG.
44:09Maybe you've really just overworked yourself.
44:11But I'm allowed to go home.
44:14If you promise me that you'll feel better then, yes.
44:17And if you come by for a check-up tomorrow.
44:21Yes.
44:28It's okay that I left you alone, isn't it?
44:32Oh, that's nice.
44:35Did Ella do this?
44:38Ella cooked.
44:40Locro.
44:41An Argentinian national dish.
44:44We lived off of it for weeks back then.
44:49She's such a great girl.
44:51She's your daughter.
44:55She wanted to thank me.
44:57Basically for everything.
45:00You basically did everything right.
45:05Maybe.
45:07At least it looks like it.
45:10I also want to thank you.
45:13For giving this old stone a place in your life.
45:20Have you already spoken to Anne Lichtenhagen?
45:24Did everything work out with the wedding?
45:26What can't work out?
45:28Did you?
45:30No, but I'll do it now.
45:33I'll get ready for bed.
45:35See you in a bit.
45:45Lichtenhagen?
45:46Mrs. Lichtenhagen, this is Philipp Stein.
45:48I didn't expect to see you in the office.
45:51You have long working days, too.
45:53Good evening, Mr. Stein.
45:55If you don't mind,
45:57sometimes I like the hours when I'm almost alone in the town hall.
46:02What can I do for you?
46:04Yes, the following.
46:05Mrs. Meissen and I thought that maybe we don't just want to celebrate our wedding in the nursery,
46:10but that we can also get married there.
46:12That's a nice idea.
46:14Yes, we think so, too.
46:15The following question.
46:16Can you marry us there?
46:18But Thomas told me that you, as the mayor, are allowed to.
46:22Yes, theoretically.
46:25If I had taken the appropriate exam at that time.
46:29But I never passed it, unfortunately.
46:32That's why I can't do it, unfortunately.
46:35Oh, no.
47:06So it can't go on like this between us.
47:10That's why I've come to a decision.
47:13I think it's better if we end our partnership.
47:24A disaster. I can't trust them.
47:26And the old date at the registry office is already expired.
47:29Then the wedding won't take place.
47:31But you're the mayor. You can trust her.
47:34I didn't take the appropriate exam.
47:36What?
47:38Oh, who knows what women really want.
47:40At least I don't.
47:42Well, everything used to be easier.
47:44Yes, you hold the lady in a coat and pay the bill.
47:48You don't have to worry about that today.
47:51I'd like it if someone held me in a coat again.
47:55Or pushed the chair in the restaurant.
47:57And paid.
47:59So you won't finally tell me what's up with the old warehouse?
48:03No.