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- The series describes the fate of the Pomeranian landowner family of Quindt in the period from 1918 to 1945.
- A thick fog force the travelers to persevere on the ground for many hours at Berlin-Tempelhof airport. Among them is a businessman who is facing ruin and not shy away, throwing his girlfriend to another man's neck in order to save himself.
- Cold War drama about an East German man trying to escape to the West via a U.S. military train passing through the Soviet Occupation Zone of Germany.
- Teen Nick is estranged from his family, and blaming himself for his Maori mate's climbing death. He runs away to his straight talking grandfather - who takes him bush - and loses his virginity to Sally.
- The story is set around 1956, two years after the first film. What was menacing then has become bitter truth: The Immenhof has been closed by officials, awaiting auction. In the meantime, Angela has died, so Jochen is now a widower. Oma Jantzen and Angela's younger sisters Dick and Dalli live with him in the forester's house. To save the manor house, Dalli has started a "pony circus" with the village children in the barn, while Dick has given up hope of Ethelbert ever returning; he hasn't written in over a year. She doesn't know he's already on his way, bringing along his university friend Ralf. When Ethelbert learns from Dalli that Dick and Ralf are getting much better acquainted than he was bargaining for (we're talking about getting to first-name basis here, it's the 1950s), and he also learns of the trouble the Immenhof is in, he secretly summons his rich uncle Pankraz and his beautiful daughter Margot to the forester's house. After many pranks the ponies and Dalli's gang of would-be cowboys play on Pankraz, he finally caves in, saves the Immenhof, and allows his daughter to marry Jochen. Dick is now expecting letters from Ralf, and Ethelbert may or may not transfer his attentions to Dalli.
- Based on historical events, the film tells the story of Operation Anthropoid which led to the assassination of the German SS leader Heydrich in Prague by Czech rebels led by Josef Gabcik and Jan Kubis.
- Robert Labitzke, 29, is sentenced to 12 years in prison for various offenses with which he 'wanted to fight injustice'. His rebelliousness in the Saalbruch prison, where he feels like a rebel and hero and threatens suicide and an escape, is severely punished: arrest cells, solitary confinement and the infamous Schweigehof. Labitzke breaks off a hunger strike and is then employed in the tailor's workshop. There he procures civilian clothing and manages to escape together with cellmates. But freedom only lasts a few hours.
- Timo.
- A public prosecutor ponders why a bank teller brutally killed the manager with an ax, without no apparent motive. And who is the mysterious Count Öderland that seems to scare everyone?
- The docu-drama is a mixed form of documentary material and staged scenes, which has experienced a renaissance in recent years. It has a long tradition in Germany largely promoted by the NDR and WDR as a television genre. In the core elements of its story a docudrama strives to adhere to known historical facts, while allowing a greater or lesser degree of dramatic license in peripheral details, and where there are gaps in the historical record.
- At the end of the 19th century, the Brandenburg nobleman Dubslav von Stechlin dominated a small town of the same name in the county of Ruppin.