Katharina Blum is a young divorcee who works as a housekeeper for a famous corporate lawyer, Hubert Blorna, and his wife, Trude. She is nicknamed "the nun" for her prudish lifestyle, but at a carnival party she meets and quickly falls in love with Ludwig Götten, whom police have been following, suspecting him of being an anarchist, a bank robber, and a terrorist. The police raid Katharina's apartment but fail to find Götten, so they search the flat, discovering an expensive ring, then arrest her and interrogate her harshly as they believe she aided and abetted her lover. She does not cooperate and is soon released, but the police continue investigating her associates and finances, occasionally leaking damning details to the press. Katharina's life is turned upside down by an invasive reporter, Werner Tötges, who works for a tabloid,
The Paper.
The Paper prints lie after lie, and Katharina receives obscene anonymous phone calls and notes. After Tötges visits Katharina's mother, who is recovering from surgery in the hospital, her mother dies. He fabricates her last words in his newspaper to give the impression that she despised her daughter with her dying breath. This upsets Katharina greatly. She trashes her apartment and moves in with her aunt, then calls Götten, but police trace the call. Götten is wounded and captured. Katharina had allowed him to hide out at the country villa of Alois Sträubleder, a political leader who was pursuing her romantically and had given her the key to his villa as well as the expensive ring. It turns out that Ludwig was not a bank robber but instead a deserter from the
Bundeswehr who stole two regiments' pay. Unable to find justice for herself or end the bad publicity, Katharina offers Tötges an interview, then shoots and kills him and his photographer. Later, Katharina and Ludwig passionately embrace for a moment as they pass each other in the basement of the jail where they are being held. In an epilogue, at Tötges's funeral, his editor delivers a hypocritical speech about how his murder was an attack on democracy and freedom of the press. The film's final image is a block of text that appears over Tötges' funeral wreath and casket, linking the film's depiction of
The Paper's
yellow journalism to the practices of the German tabloid
Bild-Zeitung. (This text also appears at the beginning of Böll's book.) It reads: The characters and action in this story are purely fictitious. Should the description of certain journalistic practices result in a resemblance to the practices of
Bild-Zeitung, such resemblance is neither intentional nor accidental, but unavoidable. == Cast ==