Ein Fall für zwei:

“Weißes Land”

Broadcast Premiere:
ZDF (Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen)
June 9, 1995

Episode directed by Markus Bräutigam
Written by Markus Bräutigam and Friedrich Ani

Starring Claus Theo Gärtner and Rainer Hunold
Guest-starring Alexander Held, Karl-Heinz von Liebezeit, Paul Outlaw, Christina Schönfeld, Christian Tasche, Hildegard Wensch and Claudine Wilde

An Odeon TV production
 

(Above marketing image, caption left) “Real estate agent B. Wallner is murdered in a hotel room. The prime suspect: her lover Anthony, whose attorney dies under mysterious circumstances. Dr. Franck steps in after some initial hesitation.”

(Caption right) “Barbara (Claudine Wilde) is having an affair with Anthony, a sex worker.”

The original Ein Fall für zwei (literally, A Case for Two) was one of the most beloved German poilce series, with a total of 300 episodes in its more than 30-year run. The Season 15 episode, “Weißes Land” (White Country), was a bit of a departure in its depiction of neo-Nazis, xenophobia and a vaguely complicit police force.

“[Paul Outlaw as] Anthony Sono, in ‘Weißes Land,’ presents a more complex (and for some viewers no doubt provocative) character. Sono is a male prostitute who is clearly good at his socially unacceptable job, as we see in an early, very erotic scene when he meets Wallner in a hotel room. His manner at the beginning is candidly aggressive, as a result of his conviction that ‘The main thing against me is the color of my skin.’ Altogether Sono is not a figure to engender immediate sympathy in all viewers, but he is at least a provocative figure rather than merely another well-meaning, misunderstood foreigner stereotype.”
- Alan Cornell, “The Depiction of Neo-Nazism in Police Shows on German Television,” German Politics and Society