Katharina und der ganz große Fisch Filming Locations
Where was Katharina und der ganz große Fisch filmed? Katharina und der ganz große Fisch was filmed in 3 locations across Germany in the following places:
Katharina und der ganz große Fisch Filming Locations
Berlin, Germany’s capital, dates to the 13th century. Reminders of the city's turbulent 20th-century history include its Holocaust memorial and the Berlin Wall's graffitied remains. Divided during the Cold War, its 18th-century Brandenburg Gate has become a symbol of reunification. The city's also known for its art scene and modern landmarks like the gold-colored, swoop-roofed Berliner Philharmonie, built in 1963.
Brandenburg an der Havel is a German town west of Berlin. It’s known for its Gothic, red-brick buildings, including the 15th-century Old Town Hall. Close by, Brandenburg Cathedral has a chapel with a painted vault, a baroque organ and a museum displaying medieval textiles. The late-medieval St. Paul’s Monastery is home to the Archaeological Museum. Nearby are the ruins of the medieval town wall.
Katharina und der ganz große Fisch (2013)
The world still seems all right on the North Sea island of Föhr. The idyllic atmosphere also affects the attitude towards life of Katharina Reiff, who "fled" from the big city to the island. In the holiday pension of her resolute mother Marianne, she concentrates entirely on her distance learning law course and, to the delight of her daughter Nele, is determined to get her helper syndrome under control: people should kindly solve their problems themselves. In theory, this good resolution works splendidly, but just when Katharina wants to get her thesis to the post at the last minute, the bizarre car accident of the new island pastor Alexander Larsen gets in the way. The man needs help, no question about it: actually sent to the island to dissolve the parish due to a lack of members, the slightly confused clergyman spends his time primarily with apocalyptic prophecies and the search for divine clues to the impending doom. Could it be a coincidence that at the same time a series of fires broke out on the island, which the former island policeman Thies Quedens, as head of the voluntary fire department, had to put out? When Katharina's smug ex-boyfriend, the lawyer Clemens Flöter, appears on the island, the budding lawyer suspects that there is no divine apocalypse threatening, but a powerful opponent with much more worldly interests: Clemens' wealthy client wants the whole Buy up the island and market it as a holiday destination for the in-crowd. The long-established residents are of course in the way. Despite further arson attacks, nobody wants to believe Katharina's warnings at first. Only when it is almost too late does she, with the help of Thies and Pastor Larsen, resort to a daring ruse to thwart the unscrupulous building speculators.