If you’ve stumbled upon the search query “Kinderspiele 1992 movie 22 install”, you’re probably confused. Is it a lost German film? A software installer? A piracy scene release? The phrase combines three distinct elements:

This article investigates each component, explains why no such movie exists, and offers guidance for those seeking legitimate retro German media.

In the scene numbering convention (common from 1995–2005), large copyrighted releases (especially CD-ROM games) were split into dozens of .001, .002, … .022 files. A search like “kinderspiele 1992 movie 22 install” likely indicates someone trying to find missing part 22 of a release.

Go to:
https://archive.org/search?query=kinderspiele+1992
Results include scanned game manuals and DOS/Windows 3.1 images.

In the annals of obscure European cinema, few titles generate as much confusion and cult fascination as Kinderspiele (1992). Directed by the reclusive Hamburg-based filmmaker Marlene Voss — whose entire known filmography consists of this single work — the project defies conventional classification. Neither a feature film nor a series of shorts, Kinderspiele was released as a “22-install” work, meaning it was meant to be screened, installed, or “installed” into a gallery space or home viewing system across 22 separate parts. Each part runs between 9 and 14 minutes, totaling roughly four hours.

A search of the German film index (Filmportal.de) and IMDb reveals zero results for a feature film, short film, or TV movie titled Kinderspiele released in 1992. The closest matches are:

It’s likely a split 7-Zip archive. To rebuild it: