
René Rindlisbacher
Acting
Known For
No description available.
Aeschbacher
No description available.
G&G – Gesichter und Geschichten
No description available.
Samschtig-Jass
No description available.
Tacho

No description available.
Total Birgit
No description available.
Der Match
No description available.
SRF Retro Quiz

No description available.
Edelmais - Gymi 5 - Klassezämekunft

No description available.
Edelmais - 2 pro Müll
Wer wird Millionär? was a Swiss game show based on the original British format of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?. The show was hosted by René Rindlisbacher. The main goal of the game was to win 1 million CHF by answering 15 multiple-choice questions correctly. There were three lifelines - fifty fifty, phone a friend and ask the audience. Wer wird Millionär? was broadcast from 27 March 2000 to 2001. It was shown on the Swiss TV station TV3. The biggest prize won on the show was 500,000 CHF won by Hans Frauchiger. In 2011, Swiss TV station 3+ resumed the Show with slight changes: the lifeline ask the audience was replaced by ask the experts and the candidate needs to choose at the beginning of the game whether he plays the save or the risky variant. If he chooses the risky variant, he gets a fourth lifeline, "Switch the question", but he loses the second guaranteed sum.
Wer wird Millionär?

No description available.
Schmirinski's: Top of Switzerland

Young archaeologist Nina never imagined that finding a medieval object in a reed bed in the Obwalden municipality of Giswil would turn her life upside down. And Baggel-Rot, Brandi-Guchs, Bichel-Botsch, Buggel-Wyyss, and Mattli-Latz would never have dreamed that it would end like this, back in Torenberg's time, when they set out on Good Friday night in 1381 to save Obwalden's honor and teach the Entlebuchers a lesson.
Die Nagelprobe

Is it Trapez or Tropez? Such harmless misunderstandings quickly escalate into complete chaos. And all because the Schmirinskis show up for a cruise on the Riviera. The Swiss TV darlings of 1999 have once again come up with a wealth of slapstick for their second feature-length and side-splitting "holiday video" – and transformed themselves into a myriad of quirky holiday guests. From the bumbling crook duo to the hard-of-hearing pensioners to the dim-witted pirates, they've got it all. Despite all the slapstick, Schmidi and René know how to make a first-class travel film: with wonderful Mediterranean weather, snapshots of the chocolate-box sides of Cannes, Saint-Tropez, and Corsica, a dream cruise ship – and, to top it all off, a crazy lap of the Formula 1 race track in Monte Carlo! But even before that, your hair stands on end...
Schmirinski's: Feriengrüsse aus Saint Tropez

Cheeky parodies, thick-skinned self-irony, unusual pantomimes, non-stop gags, a fireworks display of musical slapstick, and daring acrobatic acts make this video an unforgettable experience. Not only David Hasselhoff, Peter Maffay, the Blues Brothers, and Beat Breu are parodied, but also Federal Councilor Villiger...
Schmirinski's: Die Unvollendete

With a unique blend of offbeat humor, funky dance scenes, athletic slapstick, popular music parodies, and the use of modern video technology, the two high-flyers of the Swiss entertainment scene are providing new impetus.
Schmirinski's: PrOffice

The story of "Fiesionen" begins in a retirement home in the year 2050... Schmidi and René reside there and, unsurprisingly, continue to cause all sorts of excitement. When the inventor of the time machine, Prof. Dr. Dr. Dr. Steissbein, visits his childhood friend and nursing home director Prof. Gräulich, they spontaneously decide to punish the two incorrigible troublemakers for their inappropriate behavior by sending them back to the bad old days as guinea pigs. The two sly foxes, marked by a dreary and colorless future, decide to use the opportunity of their trip into the past to make the future more joyful and positive again. Through their entirely unselfish persuasion in our present, they hope to bring about a change in humanity's thinking. This should have a favorable influence on their own future in the retirement home.
Schmirinski's: Fiesionen

Disguised as package tourists on the island of Kos, the Schmirinskis bring the Greek hotel routine to life in a way that will have you laughing out loud. With clever situational comedy and amusing acrobatics, the "harmonious rivals" master unfamiliar situations. Neither sandcastles nor beauty queens are safe from them. And finally, is a vacation idyll in sight? A changing parody by Walter Andreas Müller ensures a chaotic end to every enjoyable night at the tavern. Memories of the two comedians flow skillfully into the story as individual episodes: Heidi's historic homecoming, how does a TED poll actually work, or is smuggling a matter of the right outfit? In any case, Schmidi and René's holiday greetings leave us with the humorous certainty that holidays are not just about dolce far niente. Or are they?
Schmirinski's: Feriengrüsse aus Kos

Oh dear, the Schmirinskis are looking back. Can that end well? Because anyone who knows them (and who doesn't?) knows that Stefan "Schmidi" Schmidlin and René Rindlisbacher can't even agree on two sentences here. But for once, they should both agree: the almost 70-minute cross-section of a good 10 years of Schmirinski's comical work is simply the best. Take, for example, their early TV appearance in Tell-Star in 1991, which already demonstrated all the hallmarks of their multifunctional humor – slapstick, wordplay, and acrobatics that border on artistic gymnastics. Or their celebrity parodies, which don't even spare "sacred" colleagues such as Don Marcocello or Kliby. Not to mention their hair-raising sports stunts, with which the two shocked the TV audience of "Top of Switzerland."