Exoticalot
People are voting emotionally.
Platicsco
Good story, Not enough for a whole film
Robert Joyner
The plot isn't so bad, but the pace of storytelling is too slow which makes people bored. Certain moments are so obvious and unnecessary for the main plot. I would've fast-forwarded those moments if it was an online streaming. The ending looks like implying a sequel, not sure if this movie will get one
Deanna
There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.
Karl Self
Keinohrhasen squeezes by as a chick flick. Of course, if you're into Til Schweiger, this is what you'll be getting galore (although he shows surprisingly little skin here). If, like me, you revile this no-talent pretty boy, you're in for a long and dire ride.Ludo (Til Schweiger) is a hotshot tabloid journalist and a serial one- night-stander, before he is sentenced to 300 hours of social service in a Kindergarten. This day care centre, unlike other such institutions in Berlin, is set on a farm somewhere in Denmark (by the looks of it) and is run by no more than two women, who are also flatmates and sleep in the same bed. Cue lots of cute scene of macho hardbody Til Schweiger being a super surrogate dad for the tiny tykes, and eventually and predictably falling for the square (she wears glasses) ugly duckling Anna.So the story is super-naff and Til Schweiger plays the only role he is capable of (himself), but this is partially compensated by the female leads Nora Tschirrner (Anna) and Alwara Höfels (Miriam, Anna's sassy colleague). While Höfel is likable as the trash-talking floozy with a heart, Tschirrner believably and memorably carries of her role of a socially inept and insecure everywoman by rebranding her natural laconicism as the protective shield of a social outcast.Overall, it wasn't as bad as I had anticipated.
pesach65
I am a guy, and I really like action flicks. My wife prefers comedies. My sister-in-law bought this movie for us when she came to visit. I have seen most of Till's movies, and I like him so that helped. I really enjoyed the movie despite knowing the outcome before I saw it. It was really funny most of the time. Here is what I would use this film for if I had the chance. Let's say that a new action flick or war movie is out and the wife would rather eat fried worms. Suggest that you watch this heart-warming romantic comedy after the cool movie. It is funny enough that you won't suffer. Besides, it's a German movie there is always a little T and A! Oh, and by the way Jan-Josef Liefers had a cameo in this film, just a heads up to the database keepers...
adric22-1
As an American, I like to watch German movies to help me better learn to speak and understand German. But I have to admit most of them aren't any good. I can count all of the good ones on one hand, and I'll place this one right on the top. I wish I could see more good movies like this coming out of Berlin. My wife watched this one with me, with the aid of subtitles, and actually enjoyed it.The use of modern, popular music is something I rarely see in foreign films. Yet there were several such cases in this one movie alone. This movie has much faster pacing than what I usually is in foreign films, much closer to what one would expect from a similar type movie out of Hollywood.
gpermant-1
I have known Til Schweiger for a number of years, ever since his great success in "Der bewegte Mann". Nora Tschirner, on the other hand, is a new face. All during the movie, I tried to remember from where I knew her... but it did not recur to me until I looked her up in IMDb. And of course: she was the holographic companion to the Astronaut Iyon Tichy of the mini-series based on Stanislaw Lem! Quite a pretty robot in that one. In Keinohrhasen, she has few possibilities to show her beauty, with those huge, ugly glasses.If there is one improbable thing in this movie, it's that Til and Nora play classmates. I mean, Til is my age (b. 1963), Nora could be his daughter (b. 1981)! And another surprise I found out only when researching, is that the four handsome children with talking parts in the movie are all Til Schweiger's own breed.One last comment: do not take your parents to this movie. They might be embarrassed by the vocab.