Und Jimmy ging zum Regenbogen

Und Jimmy ging zum Regenbogen
Directed by Alfred Vohrer
Produced by Luggi Waldleitner
Screenplay by Manfred Purzer
Starring


Alain Noury: Manuel Aranda
Horst Tappert: Lawyer Forster
Ruth Leuwerik: Valerie Steinfeld
Konrad Georg : Martin Landau
Horst Frank: Flemming
Judy Winter: Nora Hill
Doris Kunstmann: Irene Waldegg
Heinz Moog: Hofrat Groll
Eva Zilcher: Tilly Landau
Heinz Baumann: Grant
Herbert Fleischmann : Mercier
Peter Pasetti: Santarin
Friedrich G. Beckhaus: Dr. Gloggnigg
Paul Edwin Roth: Direktor Friedjung
Klaus Schwarzkopf: Sirius
Jochen Brockmann: Dr. Stein
Bruno Dallansky: Schäfer
Karl Walter Diess: Carlsson
Franz Elkins: Heinz Steinfeld
Anita Buchegger
Paul Glawion
Mascha Gonska: Bianca
Michael Janisch: Clairon
Egon von Jordan
Walter Regelsberger
Robert Werner
Herbert Kersten
Elisabeth Stiepl
Walter Varndal
Ludwig Hirsch: bell boy
Karl Hrusa: russian spy


Wolfgang Wahl
Music by Erich Ferstl
Cinematography Charly Steinberger
Edited by Jutta Hering
Release dates
1971
Running time
133
Country Germany
Language German

Und Jimmy ging zum Regenbogen is a movie by Alfred Vohrer based on the novel The Caesar Code by Johannes Mario Simmel. It was filmed in Vienna and Munich in autumn 1970 and released in March 1971.

Plot

1969. In a Vienna bookshop the Argentine chemist Rafaelo Aranda is poisoned by the bookseller Valerie Steinfeld. The bookseller commits suicide immediately afterwards. It seems the bookseller has never met him before. The chemist's son, Manuel Aranda, wants to find out the background of this murder. He finds out that his father has developed chemical weapons of mass destruction and offered to sell them to the United States, the Soviet Union and France. The Secret Services of these countries try to prevent Aranda from publishing these facts. Aranda survives a first sniper attack without even noticing it.

Manuel Aranda learns that Valerie Steinfeld was involved in a risky paternity trial during the Third Reich. Her half-Jewish son was to be protected from the Nazis. Valerie Steinfeld had persuaded a friend to claim he was her son's father. The friend had no Jewish background and was a registered member of the Nazi Party. Slowly the suspicion arises that Steinfeld and Rafaelo Aranda might have had to do with each other at this time.

With the help of Irene Waldegg, the niece of Valerie Steinfeld, Manuel Aranda finds out about the Nazi past of his father. But Valerie Steinfeld also had her personal secret. Not even Irene Waldegg had known that she also was a part of Valerie Steinfeld's past.

Literature

External links

References