Der Pass (original) (raw)

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Austrian-German police drama TV series

Der Pass
Also known as Pagan Peak
German Der Pass
Genre Thrillercrime fictiondrama
Created by Cyrill Boss [de]Philipp Stennert [de]
Inspired by _Broen | Bron_by Hans Rosenfeldt
Screenplay by Cyrill BossPhilipp StennertMike Majzen
Directed by Cyrill BossPhilipp Stennert
Starring Julia Jentsch Nicholas Ofczarek [de] Franz Hartwig
Theme music composer Jacob Shea
Composer Hans Zimmer
Country of origin AustriaGermany
Original language German
No. of seasons 3
No. of episodes 24 (list of episodes)
Production
Producers Quirin BergMax WiedemannDieter PochlatkoJakob Pochlatko
Editors Andreas BaltschunLucas Seeberger
Running time 45 mins. (per episode)
Production companies Wiedemann & Berg Film ProductionEpo-Film
Original release
Network Sky Deutschland
Release 25 January 2019 (2019-01-25) –27 May 2023 (2023-05-27)

Der Pass (English: The Pass) or Pagan Peak is an Austrian-German television crime drama series which premiered on Sky Deutschland on 25 January 2019.[1] It was inspired by season 1 of the Danish-Swedish series, Broen | Bron (English:The Bridge). Der Pass was co-created by Cyrill Boss [de] and Philipp Stennert [de], both of whom also direct and write episodes.[1] Criminal profiler Alexander Horn [de] advised on police procedure.[2] The action is set largely in the Austro-German border region from Traunstein to Salzburg. In the first season of eight episodes, two detectives, German Ellie (Julia Jentsch) and Gedeon (Nicholas Ofczarek [de]) from Austria, hunt a serial killer, Gregor (Franz Hartwig), who uses a Krampus mask as a disguise. The pilot episode, "Finsternis" (English: "Darkness"), had its world premiere on 21 September 2018 at the Tribeca TV Festival, ahead of the full series premiere.[3][4] Its Austrian debut was at the Urania Cinema, Vienna, on 15 January 2019,[5][6] and its German premiere at Gloria-Palast, Munich, on the following day.[7]

Season 2 of Der Pass, also of eight episodes, began airing on 21 January 2022.[8][9] In this season, Ellie and Gedeon investigate a series of murders after female bodies are found in the border area.[9] Their killer, Xandi (Dominic Marcus Singer [de]), is protected by his family's business empire. A third and final season aired beginning 4 May 2023. Ellie and Gedeon track a series of seemingly unconnected murders committed by Felix (Felix Kammerer) who is encouraged by Stefan (August Diehl), a "Jackl the Knacker" imitator.

Season oneGedeon and Ellie respond to a body at the border. It is the first victim of a serial killer, Gregor, who wears a Krampus mask. Gregor warns: "The Red Season Is Coming." Gedeon alerts authorities of Gregor's imminent bombing of a shopping mall; a child is killed. Tech-savvy Gregor hacks into Ellie's computer to stay ahead of the investigation. A copycat suspect is killed by police and authorities declare the case closed. A year later, Gedeon is unconvinced and persuades Ellie to search for another victim. Gregor has moved next door to Ellie. He poisons both her and himself before being arrested. Gedeon saves Ellie's life. At a traffic stop, Gedeon is shot as gangland revenge.

Season twoA year later, Ellie mentors junior detective Yela, and is joined by Gedeon as a police advisor. They investigate another serial killer, Xandi, who tortures, rapes, and revives his female victims before killing them. Xandi uses folklore rituals typical of how hunters killed and displayed wild animals. Both Ellie and Gedeon are recovering from traumas. Xandi is protected by his older brother Wolfgang, his mother Therese, the family's employee Manni and investigating chief detective Manuel. Wolfgang kills Yela with a family rifle. Following an anonymous tip from Wolfgang, Xandi is arrested and imprisoned for multiple murders, and confesses for the killing of Yela too. Gedeon smuggles the rifle out of the evidence archive at Therese's behest, in exchange for Theresa paying a surgeon to remove the bullet from Gedeon's brain. Wolfgang leaves for South Africa, and Gedeon is reinstated with honors as a police officer.

Season threeSix months later, serial killer Felix follows instructions from his leader, Stefan, who poses as a legendary figure, Jackl the Knacker. Ellie and Gedeon now have a fractious relationship. Ellie blames Gedeon for Wolfgang escaping justice. In the meantime, Gedeon, who is still suffering from the operation and has hallucinations, also investigates the whereabouts of Oskar, an artist who gained notoriety for his painting of children and who abused Gedeon as a child. Felix successively kills Samir, Marianne, Tobias and Peter while praying to Jackl, "sequere me, te protegam" (English: "Follow me, I'll protect you") . Stefan is questioned but released due to insufficient evidence. Gedeon finally tracks down and kills Oskar using Wolfgang's rifle. Ellie confronts Felix but he commits suicide. Internal Affairs investigates Gedeon and Ellie. Gedeon finds a link between Felix's victims and Stefan, who has disappeared.

Credits:[10][11]

Credits:[12]

Co-creator Philipp Stennert [de] acknowledged that Der Pass was inspired by the 2011 Danish-Swedish series, Broen | Bron (English:The Bridge) and observed, "Apart from the premise of two countries working together and finding a body on the border, everything else is pretty much a completely new story."[13] The creators researched serial killers, including their online interviews, in developing the character of Gregor Ansbach (Franz Hartwig).[13] The process was assisted by criminal profiler Alexander Horn (profiler) [de].[2] Unusually for a crime drama, the antagonist, Gregor, is revealed early in the series and has a more visible presence.[13] Another deliberate effort is the evolution of both protagonists. Gedeon starts as a jaded, cynical and corrupt officer who becomes dedicated to catching Gregor, and who is protective of Ellie. Meanwhile, Ellie starts as a committed, enthusiastic and by-the-book officer who becomes a rule-breaker, slightly burned out and traumatised.[13] Stennart described Ellie's character as difficult to write, "[one] who is truly good but also interesting."[13]

Filming of Der Pass took place from November 2017 to April 2018 in both Austria and Germany, at Bad Gastein, Berchtesgaden, Graz, Söcking, Vienna, Grundlsee and Sportgastein.[5] The series was co-produced by the Austrian company Epo-Film and the German company Wiedemann & Berg Film Production,.[1] Production was supported by FilmFernsehFonds Bayern, Fernsehfonds Austria, the film funding of the state of Salzburg, the CINESTYRIA Filmcommission and Fonds and Film Commission Graz.[7] Additional crew members were Andreas Baltschun [de] and Lucas Seeberger [de] for film editing, Thomas Oláh [de] on costume design, Heike Lange on set design, Herbert Verdino, Walter Fiklocki and Quirin Böhm for original sound, Nico Krebsfor on final sound design and mixing, and Tatjana Luckdorf and Evgenia Popova on make-up Design.[3]

The second season filming began in January 2020,[14][15] however, it was delayed by restrictions due to the COVID-19 pandemic and resumed in April and continued intermittently to December 2020.[10][16] For this season, Stennert described how, "It's so interesting to see how someone becomes a perpetrator in the first place. So this time we wanted to start following this guy before the first corpse."[17] Broadcasting started on 21 January 2022 on Sky Deutschland and ZDF.[16]

Ray Flook of Bleeding Cool reviewed the pilot episode of Pagan Peak, which depicts "crime scenes with symbolically posed victims, reminiscent of pagan rituals."[4] Die Presse's Anna-Marie Wallner observed the series title, Der Pass, has multiple meanings, both the geographical location between Austria and Germany and the annual festival group of St Nicholas, Krampus and the Angel.[1] Wallner praised the "courageous and rather unusual" storyline, where the villain is revealed to the audience in episode 3 while "tension nevertheless persists."[1] Der Spiegel's Oliver Kaever felt, "It is about isolation, the power of the Internet and digital surveillance fantasies... [and] the enormously spreading grief here that man is a wolf to man. And the world is not a place that forgives."[18]

  1. ^ a b c d e Wallner, Anna-Maria (19 January 2019). ""Der Pass": Was will dieser Krampus?" [The Pass: What does this Krampus want?]. Die Presse (in German). Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  2. ^ a b "Sky: Der Pass" [Sky: _The Pass_] (in German). Sky Deutschland. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  3. ^ a b "Der Pass, TV-Serie, 2017-2021" [The Pass, TV series, 2017-2021]. Crew United (in German). Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  4. ^ a b Flook, Ray (29 September 2018). "Tribeca TV Festival: Pagan Peak is On Point, Patricia Moore has Bite, Deadwax Skips a Beat (Review)". Bleeding Cool. Retrieved 18 January 2022.
  5. ^ a b Ude, Christian (16 January 2019). "Sky-Serie Der Pass Verloren gegen die Übermacht der Natur" [Sky Series The Pass Lost to the Superiority of Nature]. Kleine Zeitung. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  6. ^ "'Je schlechter das Wetter, desto stärker die Bilder'" ['The worse the weather, the stronger the images']. LeadersNet. 16 January 2019. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  7. ^ a b "Umjubelte Deutschlandpremiere der neuen Sky Original Production Der Pass in München" [Acclaimed German premiere of the new Sky Original Production Der Pass in Munich] (in German). 17 January 2019. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  8. ^ "Sky gibt zweite Staffel der Sky Original Production Der Pass in Auftrag" [Sky commissions second season of Sky Original Production _The Pass_]. Press Portal (in German). 20 February 2019. Retrieved 18 January 2022.
  9. ^ a b "Alberts "Paradiso" und "Ibiza-Affäre" bei Sky in den Startlöchern" [Albert's Paradiso and Ibiza Affair at Sky in the starting blocks]. Salzburger Nachrichten/APA (in German). 17 September 2021. Retrieved 18 January 2022.
  10. ^ a b "Pagan Peak, TV Series, 2017-2021". Crew United. Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  11. ^ "Second season with Gedeon Winter and Ellie Stocker". Archyde. 8 January 2022. Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  12. ^ "Der Pass [Staffel 3]". filmportal.de (in German). Retrieved 5 January 2024.
  13. ^ a b c d e Edwards, Nick (4 April 2018). "A new crossing". Drama Quarterly. Retrieved 19 January 2022.
  14. ^ Weise, Marco (30 January 2020). "Dreharbeiten zur Fortsetzung von "Der Pass" gestartet" [Filming of the Sequel to The Pass Started]. Kurier (in German). Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  15. ^ Weis, Manuel (30 January 2020). "Nur der Schnee fehlt? Dreharbeiten zu neuen "Der Pass"-Folgen laufen" [Only the Snow is Missing? Filming of New The Pass Episodes Underway]. Quotenmeter (in German). Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  16. ^ a b Lorenzen, Tjark (11 November 2021). "Der Pass Staffel 2: Start, Handlung, Besetzung und Start bei Sky und in der ZDF-Mediathek" [The Pass Season 2: Start, Plot, Cast and Start on Sky and in the ZDF Media Library]. netzwelt.de (in German). Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  17. ^ Kraft, Katja (22 January 2022). "Sky series Der Pass 2: That's why the new season is worth it". The Limited Times. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
  18. ^ Kaever, Oliver (25 January 2019). "Der Pass (Sky) mit Julia Jentsch Geschickte Neuverfilmung von die Brücke" [The Pass (Sky) with Julia Jentsch Clever Remake of _The Bridge_]. Der Spiegel (in German). Retrieved 19 January 2022.