Fred goes to Hell but makes a deal with Death that if he can heal the hearts of three women he's mistreated, he will be given a second chance at life.
Fred, a selfish macho type, runs the "Amor" matchmaking agency and frequently gets involved with his attractive customers.
But it turns out differently; With his negotiating skills, he manages to enter into a deal with the ferryman: if he makes three heartbroken women happy within three days, he will get his life back.
However, since the accident victim himself has disappeared, Charlotte complains to the hired killer and unceremoniously kills him with a poisoned arrow.
But she too has a secret, because she is a militant animal rights activist and, among other things, frees rabbits from test laboratories.
First, Fred wants to take care of his sixteen-year-old daughter Lisa, whom he had completely neglected in recent years and who has gotten into the clutches of pimps.
The outlay on equipment and technical effects is matched by excellent acting performances that absorb the grotesque game.
"[1] In 2012, it was announced director Andy Fickman was set to direct an American remake of Nur über meine Leiche, though these plans never materialized.