At first glance, it looks like a relic. The .104 suggests a scene release number. The -wor tag points to a long-dormant German release group. But the title— “Schatz, es tut gar nicht weh” (roughly: “Darling, it doesn’t hurt at all” or “Honey, that doesn’t hurt a bit” )—is pure poetry. And a mystery.
— Found and written by a ghost from the x264 era Have you ever seen this film? Or did I imagine it? Reply below (comments are open, but expect nostalgia and broken links).
Lost and Found: Revisiting the Tender German Oddity “Schatz, es tut gar nicht weh” (104.DVDRip.x264-wor…)
Only if you have patience for elliptical storytelling, long takes of Berlin rain, and a soundtrack of broken piano chords. Only if you believe that a movie can hurt a little—but in a way that doesn’t really hurt at all.
And that’s the magic. This isn’t a Criterion restoration. It’s not on any streaming service. There’s no Blu-ray. The only way to see Schatz, es tut gar nicht weh is through this imperfect, scene‑released DVDRip, passed from hard drive to hard drive like a secret.
The file is a —a relic from the transitional era (late 2000s) when scene groups were moving from massive VOB files to elegant, compressed x264 MKVs. The video is non-anamorphic, interlaced in places, with burned-in German subtitles for the 10% of dialogue that’s in Turkish (the grandmother’s subplot). It looks like it was ripped from a promo DVD that came with a German film magazine. The bitrate is modest, but the grain feels intentional—like watching a memory degrade.
The final scene, where Maren and Tobias laugh at the absurdity of their own experiment, is worth the hunt alone. No Hollywood ending. Just two people, a cracked window, and the quiet understanding that some pain is just another name for being alive.
If you’ve never heard of it, you’re not alone. A quick search reveals almost nothing in English. The German film registry lists it as a 2002 low-budget dramedy, directed by (her only feature, sadly). It never saw a theatrical release outside of a handful of art houses in Berlin and Hamburg.
I won’t link to anything here. But if you know where to look for old scene releases (think: private trackers with a focus on German cinema, or Usenet archives from 2009), search for the exact string: Schatz.Es.Tut.Gar.nicht.Weh.104.DVDRip.x264-wor . The file size is ~700MB. The checksum is often wrong. Play it in VLC with deinterlacing on.
And when you watch it, pour a glass of cheap red wine. Turn off the lights. Let it hurt—just a little.
Sometimes, the best discoveries happen by accident. You’re digging through an old external hard drive, a forgotten corner of a torrent archive, or a dusty DVD-R from a film fair. You spot a file name that stops you cold:
The plot, pieced together from old forum posts: A young couple, (played with raw vulnerability by Jasmin Tabatabai ) and Tobias (a heartbreaking Devid Striesow ), try to salvage their crumbling relationship by… inflicting small, controlled amounts of pain on each other. Not a horror film—more like a melancholy, deadpan Haneke-lite meets Eternal Sunshine . The tagline: “We thought love was supposed to be comfortable. We were wrong.”
Schatz.es.tut.gar.nicht.weh.104.dvdrip.x264-wor... | 1080p |
At first glance, it looks like a relic. The .104 suggests a scene release number. The -wor tag points to a long-dormant German release group. But the title— “Schatz, es tut gar nicht weh” (roughly: “Darling, it doesn’t hurt at all” or “Honey, that doesn’t hurt a bit” )—is pure poetry. And a mystery.
— Found and written by a ghost from the x264 era Have you ever seen this film? Or did I imagine it? Reply below (comments are open, but expect nostalgia and broken links).
Lost and Found: Revisiting the Tender German Oddity “Schatz, es tut gar nicht weh” (104.DVDRip.x264-wor…)
Only if you have patience for elliptical storytelling, long takes of Berlin rain, and a soundtrack of broken piano chords. Only if you believe that a movie can hurt a little—but in a way that doesn’t really hurt at all. Schatz.Es.Tut.Gar.nicht.Weh.104.DVDRip.x264-wor...
And that’s the magic. This isn’t a Criterion restoration. It’s not on any streaming service. There’s no Blu-ray. The only way to see Schatz, es tut gar nicht weh is through this imperfect, scene‑released DVDRip, passed from hard drive to hard drive like a secret.
The file is a —a relic from the transitional era (late 2000s) when scene groups were moving from massive VOB files to elegant, compressed x264 MKVs. The video is non-anamorphic, interlaced in places, with burned-in German subtitles for the 10% of dialogue that’s in Turkish (the grandmother’s subplot). It looks like it was ripped from a promo DVD that came with a German film magazine. The bitrate is modest, but the grain feels intentional—like watching a memory degrade.
The final scene, where Maren and Tobias laugh at the absurdity of their own experiment, is worth the hunt alone. No Hollywood ending. Just two people, a cracked window, and the quiet understanding that some pain is just another name for being alive. At first glance, it looks like a relic
If you’ve never heard of it, you’re not alone. A quick search reveals almost nothing in English. The German film registry lists it as a 2002 low-budget dramedy, directed by (her only feature, sadly). It never saw a theatrical release outside of a handful of art houses in Berlin and Hamburg.
I won’t link to anything here. But if you know where to look for old scene releases (think: private trackers with a focus on German cinema, or Usenet archives from 2009), search for the exact string: Schatz.Es.Tut.Gar.nicht.Weh.104.DVDRip.x264-wor . The file size is ~700MB. The checksum is often wrong. Play it in VLC with deinterlacing on.
And when you watch it, pour a glass of cheap red wine. Turn off the lights. Let it hurt—just a little. But the title— “Schatz, es tut gar nicht
Sometimes, the best discoveries happen by accident. You’re digging through an old external hard drive, a forgotten corner of a torrent archive, or a dusty DVD-R from a film fair. You spot a file name that stops you cold:
The plot, pieced together from old forum posts: A young couple, (played with raw vulnerability by Jasmin Tabatabai ) and Tobias (a heartbreaking Devid Striesow ), try to salvage their crumbling relationship by… inflicting small, controlled amounts of pain on each other. Not a horror film—more like a melancholy, deadpan Haneke-lite meets Eternal Sunshine . The tagline: “We thought love was supposed to be comfortable. We were wrong.”