Wilsberg is a German TV series based on novels about the fictional private detective Georg Wilsberg. A first TV episode was aired in 1995, five years after the release of the first novel, starring Joachim Król. Since the second episode (aired more than three years later), Leonard Lansink has been starring as Georg Wilsberg.
Wilsberg | |
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Created by | Jürgen Kehrer |
Starring | Leonard Lansink Heinrich Schafmeister Oliver Korittke Ina Paule Klink Rita Russek Roland Jankowsky |
Country of origin | Germany |
No. of episodes | 65 |
Production | |
Running time | 90 Minutes |
Release | |
Original network | ZDF |
Original release | 20 February 1995 (1995-02-20) |
Georg Wilsberg, a sturdy man in his late fifties, runs a bookshop for antiquarian books[1] in the city of Münster, and works on a sideline as a private detective. Both jobs mix very well. He purchases whole libraries if he can, preferably striking bargains by buying the bequest of a recently deceased. Wilsberg has a business card which gives away his side job, so if there are any doubts concerning the circumstances of the death, the relatives are inclined to employ him. Other customers appreciate the chance to hire a private detective discreetly by pretending they are just looking for rare books when they visit him. Wilsberg investigates cases all over Münster and its outskirts. Since he's permanently short of money, he doesn't own a car and has to borrow one from his friends, or even steal one, as a running gag. In his investigations, he doesn't care much about legal regulations, so he frequently burgles private homes in search of evidence and gets arrested.
Other characters are:
Readers of the novels recognise many of the plots and locations in the television series, however some adaptation was needed in order to make the material easily intelligible to a national audience and to those who had not read the books. Due to the success of the series new scripts were commissioned recounting stories not present in the novels.
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