Das doppelte Lottchen Filming Locations
Das doppelte Lottchen Filming Locations
Frankfurt, a central German city on the river Main, is a major financial hub that's home to the European Central Bank. It's the birthplace of famed writer Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, whose former home is now the Goethe House Museum. Like much of the city, it was damaged during World War II and later rebuilt. The reconstructed Altstadt (Old Town) is the site of Römerberg, a square that hosts an annual Christmas market.
Dahner Felsenland is a Verbandsgemeinde in the Südwestpfalz district, in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It is situated in the Palatinate forest, approx. 15 km southeast of Pirmasens, and 25 km west of Landau. Its seat of administration is in its central town, Dahn.
Bad Ischl is an Austrian spa town east of Salzburg. It’s known as a gateway to the Alpine lakes and mountains of the Salzkammergut region. The Biedermeier Kaiservilla displays the chambers in which Habsburg Emperor Franz Joseph l spent his summers. On the grounds, the Marmorschlössl, a tea house built for his wife, Empress Elisabeth, houses the Photomuseum, with exhibits illuminating the early years of photography.
Salzburg is an Austrian city on the border of Germany, with views of the Eastern Alps. The city is divided by the Salzach River, with medieval and baroque buildings of the pedestrian Altstadt (Old City) on its left bank, facing the 19th-century Neustadt (New City) on its right. The Altstadt birthplace of famed composer Mozart is preserved as a museum displaying his childhood instruments.
Rhineland-Palatinate is a southwest German state bordered by France, Belgium and Luxembourg. The state capital, Mainz, features Jewish synagogues and cemeteries, the Romanesque Mainz Cathedral with ornate tombstones, and the Gutenberg Museum devoted to the inventor of the printing press. The lush Moselle Valley, with its riverside towns of Piesport and Bernkastel-Kues, is one of Germany's largest wine regions.
Das doppelte Lottchen (2017)
Erich Kästner's "Das doppelte Lottchen" is the classic story of swapping roles, and now also the basis for a dramatic yet cheerful family film on Das Erste. Amidst a playful game of confusion, twin sisters Lotte and Luise finally discover that their parents had intended to forever hide from them.