Lessons of a Dream (German: Der ganz große Traum) is a German drama film directed by Sebastian Grobler, loosely based on the life of German football pioneer Konrad Koch in the late 19th-century. In the film, Koch is one of the first English teachers in the German Empire, in Braunschweig. He introduces his students to the new sport of football, completely unknown outside of England at the time, to get them interested in English culture and the English language. Koch's liberal teaching methods upset his conservative colleagues, the student's parents, and local dignitaries.[2]
Lessons of a Dream | |
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Directed by | Sebastian Grobler |
Screenplay by | Philipp Roth |
Produced by | Anatol Nitschke Raoul B. Reinert |
Starring | Daniel Brühl Burghart Klaußner Justus von Dohnányi Kathrin von Steinburg Thomas Thieme Jürgen Tonkel Theo Trebs |
Cinematography | Martin Langer |
Edited by | Dirk Grau |
Music by | Ingo Frenzel |
Distributed by | Senator Film Verleih |
Release date |
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Running time | 105 minutes |
Country | Germany |
Language | German |
Budget | €5.5 million[1] |
The real-life Konrad Koch was a teacher of German, Ancient Greek, and Latin in Braunschweig. He wrote the first German version of the rules of football and organized the arguably first ever match of football in Germany in 1874, between pupils of his school, the Martino-Katharineum.[3][4] However, unlike in the film, Koch's original German version of the rules of football, published in 1875, still closely resembled those of rugby football. In addition, Koch was actually a conservative himself and did not get into trouble with the authorities.[5]
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