Hurra, die Schule brennt - Die Lümmel von der ersten Bank IV. Teil (1969) Poster

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4/10
Another "Pepe" Installment - How to drive teachers crazy with silly stunts
thursdaysrecords15 April 2019
Pepe Nietnagel, the perpetual class clown is the nightmare of the staff at the prestigious "Momsen Gymnasium". Known for his outrageous practical jokes, teachers, and particularly the principal are always rightfully suspicious whenever they have to deal with "that class". The commercial success of the first film, encouraged the producers and many of the cast to crank out more annual installments. The practical jokes range from innocent "rude noises" to dangerous pranks that could cause physical and material damage. Juvenile and obnoxious, but always in "good fun" ? The students may be amused, but sometimes the "grown-ups" are suffering.

This installment in the film series presents a double-ticket of well known recording artists of their time, namely the extremely popular Peter Alexander and the child star Heintje, who was at the height of his success as a pre-teen "Grandma's favorite". It is not credible, that students who are ripe for University studies would flock around these two "Schmalz" singers. Sorry, but have you heard of The Rolling Stones or The Beatles? "Heintje Songs" were hardly on teenagers' radar ca. 1970! To pretend otherwise (which they do here) is ridiculous!

Back in the day such films still ran in theaters (when I was still in grade school), I enjoyed this sort of silly fare. Today I can only give 4 out of 10 points, and would not sit through one of those yarns. You can take your chances, but I recommend skipping this nonsense!
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4/10
Almost disastrous, but with redeeming features
SMK-41 May 2008
Anything with Peter Alexander and Heintje as top-billed cast members normally qualifies as an embarrassment that makes you want to hide behind the sofa - and this is not really an exception. The horrible couple unsurprisingly burst into song at inopportune moments, often too quickly to give the viewer time to hit the mute button. To make things worse, Peter Alexander plays his usual everybody-loves-me character - a character that was dated long before this movie came out.

However, this film can boost a few redeeming values - the support cast of Lingen, Schündler, Golling, and Stephan is in good form, but a particular jewel that really lifts the film is the scene with Werner Finck and Harald Juhnke. As brief as the scene is, it shows a prime example of Finck's perfect comic timing; that scene alone makes the film worth watching.
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6/10
More of the usual Warning: Spoilers
"Hurra, die Schule brennt" is the fourth from seven Lümmel films from the late 1960s/early 1970s. These films were about a bunch of school kids playing pranks on their teachers. The core essence in this film is that it is mostly comedy and that the characters and actors are the same for the most part, but there is usually one new teacher who easily masters the class and develops a friendly relationship with the rascals. Add a little (not serious) drama, some music and some romance and you have the stereotypical Lümmel film. This one here, the middle film from from the franchise, is exactly the same. Peter Alexander and Heintje already appeared on the second movie and they return together here playing different characters though, relatives this time. And with Alexander, there is always some romance involved too. The cast includes many famous names once again. I will not mention who, you can check out the list for that, but it is very much an above-average number of actors that are still known in Germany in the years 2016. No surprise the film reached a Golden Screen again. The film lives through the charm and recognition value of the characters here as well, even if I must say the pranks have become less interesting compared to the first films of the series, but some are still decent. Overall, nonetheless the positive outweighs the negative and I give this one a thumbs-up.
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WARBLING AND FATUITY
J. Steed12 September 1999
This 4th part of the "Lümmel series" is absolutely a peak in fatuity and stuffy morals. In this part not only the usual imbecile humour and ditto scripting, trying to introduce some "freshness" into the by now thread bare format the story (such as there is) is centered around Schager-singer Peter Alexander and a very embarrassing export product from The Netherlands: boy singer Heintje as Alexander's nephew, who is looking for a wife for his uncle as uncle is very clumsy at house keeping - wow, what an exciting subject.

While Heintje torments the ears with his warbling, Peter Alexander - who needed a good director to be acceptable - bores the viewer to death by just being there, but especially during his bloody awful impersonation of Hans Moser. Watching these two you would have give anything to have Hannelore Elsner and even Uschi Glas back. Seeing this part I again wondered why such great comedians as Theo Lingen, Ruth Stephan and Werner Finck (in this part only) kept working in the series; were they forced or is it proof that in the declining German mainstream cinema there was no place for them?

There is a modernized version of Schiller's "Wilhelm Tell" as school play, that combines Tell with Bonanza! O yes, this could have been a fine idea if executed well and with a sense of humour and tongue-in-cheek, but it is of course a very reactionary view on the social changes within society: in this case make fun of those who seriously wanted to modernize the classics. Alexander has to shoot an egg on top of Heintje's head; he should have missed.
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2/10
Too harmless to be fun
blumdeluxe11 April 2019
Warning: Spoilers
"Hurra, die Schule brennt" tells the story of an elite teacher who, along with his son, is assigned to a very small school in order to end the chaos that has been taking place there. Once arrived, the two worlds collapse and a beautiful new teacher could end the bachelor life he used to live.

This film is by any means harmless. You could watch it with your grandmother and she would probably just say what a nice film this is and what a nice person the main character. Even the humor and the jokes seem so conservative that you feel a desperate need to break out. The story is average, neither horrible nor a pleasure but all together this film is a cry for a revolution because it is so meaningless and non-provocative that it hurts sometimes.

All in all this is a movie you should put on if you want to make sure that no family member feels offended but you will have to deal with a lot of shiny happy people and a total lack of realism.
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