Skip to main content

FoundFootage.com

Peacock (2025)

February 20, 2025 (AT) Comedy • 102m

Overview

Matthias is a master of pretense, from cultured boyfriend to perfect son or marital coach. He makes a career of being someone else. The real challenge begins when he has to be himself.

Director

Bernhard Wenger

Top Billed

Albrecht Schuch

Keywords

Top Billed Cast

Crew
Anne Schubert
Anne Schubert

Production Accountant

Nora Conradi
Nora Conradi

Makeup & Hair

Eva Roth
Eva Roth

Casting Director

Jasmin Schwendinger
Jasmin Schwendinger

Second Assistant Camera

Albin Wildner
Albin Wildner

Director of Photography

Monika Stuhl Conforti
Monika Stuhl Conforti

Script Supervisor

Lukas Köchler
Lukas Köchler

Steadicam Operator

Christian Schulz
Christian Schulz

Still Photographer

Thomas Guggenberger
Thomas Guggenberger

Additional Lighting Technician

Bernhard Schlick
Bernhard Schlick

Digital Imaging Technician

Maren Hraba
Maren Hraba

Extras Casting Coordinator

Kristin Barthold
Kristin Barthold

Additional Hairstylist

Julia Willi
Julia Willi

Assistant Editor

Joachim Neger
Joachim Neger

Assistant Unit Manager

Ires Jung
Ires Jung

First Assistant Director

Cornelia Dworak
Cornelia Dworak

Stunt Coordinator

Albert Car
Albert Car

First Assistant Sound Editor

Patricia Schömitz
Patricia Schömitz

Location Scout

Lena Damm
Lena Damm

Assistant Makeup Artist

Wilhelm Iben
Wilhelm Iben

Second Assistant Director

Lukas Lauermann
Lukas Lauermann

Original Music Composer



Reviews

CinemaSerf

⭐ 7/10

March 4, 2025

The moustachioed “Matthias” (Albrecht Schuch) works for a business that rents him out. Not for sex, but for just about everything else and he’s good at it. From a companion at a posh concert to a gay lover to a gent who pretends to be a son so he can help his “dad” get to be president of his golf club, he can turn his hand to most things with aplomb. Except, that is, in his perfectly styled home where he and girlfriend “Sophia” (Julia Franz Richt… read the rest.

Brent Marchant

⭐ 9/10

October 5, 2025

In this age of increasingly untrustworthy AI, rampant fake news and unabashedly self-serving social media, it’s becoming ever more difficult for many of us to distinguish what’s “real” and what isn’t these days, almost as if we’re stuck in a frightening new Orwellian paradigm. That’s significant, not only for how we perceive existence, but even in terms of how we experience and respond to it. In fact, these circumstances might even be looked upon… read the rest.

Status

Released

Original Language

DE

Budget

Revenue

This product uses the TMDB API but is not endorsed or certified by TMDB.