Using his status as a police informant to procure his victims, baby-faced, shaven-headed Fritz Haarmann dismembers their bodies after death and sells the flesh to restaurants, dumping the re... Read allUsing his status as a police informant to procure his victims, baby-faced, shaven-headed Fritz Haarmann dismembers their bodies after death and sells the flesh to restaurants, dumping the remainder out of sight.Using his status as a police informant to procure his victims, baby-faced, shaven-headed Fritz Haarmann dismembers their bodies after death and sells the flesh to restaurants, dumping the remainder out of sight.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
- Opfer
- (as Reiner Will)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaListed as one of the 1,000 movies that will change your life in the book by TimeOut.
- GoofsThe US military general at the police station mentioned "Nazi". The term "Nazi" wasn't coined until 1926 when Joseph Goebbels published a pamphlet. Previously, the organization was called NSDAP. The film took place in the early 1920s with the exact reference to 1925 at the end of the film.
- Quotes
Insp. Fritz Haarmann: Take my little life. I am not afraid of death through the axe of the hangman. It is my salvation. I am happy to give my death and my blood for atonement into God's arms and justice. It could've been 30, but also 40. I don't know. There are victims that you don't know about. But they are not the ones you're thinking of. They were the most beautiful ones I had.
- Crazy credits"Mein Tod und Blut gebe ich gern zur Sühne in Gottes Arme und Gerechtigkeit" Fritz Haarmann (I will gladly give my death and blood as a reparation into the arms of god and justice)
- ConnectionsEdited into Ulli Lommel's Zodiac Killer (2005)
Written by the great Kurt Raab, who also stars as Haarmann, Tenderness of the Wolves doesn't spend any time trying to understand the motivation of the man dubbed the Vampire of Hanover, but instead shows us a snippet of his debauched life. Moving the story from 1924 (when Haarmann was arrested in real-life) to post World War II, Germany is a country clearly feeling the economic strain of losing the war, where the black market is flourishing and con-man Haarmann is doing very well for himself. Along with his on-and-off lover and pimp Hans Grans (Jeff Roden), he swindles clothes from good Samaritans and sells them on for profit, as well as selling meat to bar owner Louise (Brigitte Mira) which may or may not be the bodies of his victims.
As a horror, it achieves it's disturbing atmosphere not through gratuitousness, but through the squalor of its setting, observant direction, and Raab's magnificent performance. Haartmann was a gay child molester who enjoyed throttling his victims, biting into their throats (often through the Adam's apple), before chopping them into pieces and throwing them into the Leine River. We don't see much of the murders, but when they do occur they are filmed without sensationalism, made all the more unsettling due to the full-frontal male nudity of some of the film's under-age actors, something extremely rare in horror even today.
Haartmann, shaven-headed and ghostly pale, manipulates his victims by posing as a police officer before drugging and overpowering them, often making little effort to cover his tracks or dispose of the bodies discretely. This arrogance, although it would eventually lead to his arrest, makes him even more of a monster, and Raab delivers a truly terrific performance. Without attempting to explain his actions or even offer a background of how Haarmann got into the criminal business and how he developed a taste for human blood, Tenderness of the Wolves becomes more about the world he inhabits and the creepy characters who surround him. It's hardly a film to discuss over breakfast, but it will no doubt stay with you for long after the credits have rolled.
- tomgillespie2002
- Aug 13, 2015
- Permalink
- How long is Tenderness of the Wolves?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Die Zärtlichkeit der Wölfe
- Filming locations
- Gelsenkirchen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany(street scenes)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- DEM 250,000 (estimated)