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- A university researcher is fired because of budget cuts. To earn a living, he decides to produce drugs and recruits his former colleagues, who are living at the margins of society despite their skills.
- After the flames is an apocalypse anthology of seven cerebral and stylish stories, each sharing a vision of the end of days.
- Depicts the West German rocker Udo Lindenberg's concert at the Palace of the Republic, East Berlin, on October 25, 1983, during the "Festival for World Peace".
- Why was classical music so important to Hitler and Goebbels? The stories of Jewish cellist Anita Lasker-Wallfisch, who survived Auschwitz, and of star conductor Wilhelm Furtwängler, who worked with the Nazis, provide insight. The film centers around two people who represent musical culture during the Third Reich - albeit in very different ways. Wilhelm Furtwängler was a star conductor; Anita Lasker-Wallfisch, the cellist of the infamous Women's Orchestra of Auschwitz. Both shared a love for the classical German music.
- Katarina Witt is the most successful female athlete in the history of figure skating with two Olympic victories, four world championship and six European championship titles. She combines East German identity with international flair and is to this day the "most beautiful face of socialism" - and the most internationally known citizen of the former GDR. She has reinvented herself again and again: as an East German ice princess, as an international show star, as an ambassador for sport. To this day, she confidently stands by her GDR origins, which many give her high credit, but which also brought her hostility.
- How has the Bauhaus school of architecture and design, Germany's best-known art-school, shaped the world we live in today?
- When a Catholic Girl marries a Jewish boy what is the worst day of the year to get married? Christmas Day of course! No ones gets married on Christmas Day! All hell breaks loose when these two wacky families try to pull off the affair of a lifetime against all odds.
- A look inside the East German police. The Film tells the story of this existentially symbiotic relationship from the perspective of the Stasi under its notorious leader Erich Mielke. It's the first time this most sensitive chapter of East Germany's history has been told in such an exemplary and coherent way: including the deaths that took place at the Wall, and the cover-up and concealment of many of those murders.
- Asia's Startup Founders on Innovative and Inspiring Solutions . German entrepreneurs meet their Asian counterpart and explore the local economy.
- Letters Without Signatures was the name of a German BBC radio program that was aimed specifically at listeners in the GDR. For almost 25 years, from the early 1950s until 1974, it enjoyed popularity with listeners from East Germany, who could also write anonymous letters to the editors with their everyday concerns as well as their political opinions.
- The world's most important collection of pictures, sculptures and texts from psychiatric clinics, the Heidelberg Collection Prinzhorn, has opened up its archives and magazines to the director Christian Beetz and granted an insight into peculiarly iridescent art worlds. Fascinating as well as disturbing works have come to light, creations of undisguised directness and power - created about a hundred years ago behind high prison walls and barred windows and doors under circumstances that are hardly imaginable today.
- Deep in the jungle of Cambodia lies a jewel from the Khmer Empire: the temple of Banteay Chhmar. Half devoured by plants and long forgotten by most people, the 800-year-old complex is being rediscovered, slowly.
- 2017– 26mTV EpisodeKorea's education system is ruled by competition. With suicide being the No.1 cause of death among teenagers, it's been argued the system produces overachieving students who pay a high price in health and happiness. Digitalization could bring about a change to Korea's overheated education system.
- 2017– 25mTV EpisodeThe 2008 financial crisis spread distrust in banks and sped up the acceptance of new kinds of money. Cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin now promise to provide transparent, democratic alternatives. Startups in the Philippines are disrupting old structures.
- 2017– 25mTV EpisodeAll over the globe, digital transformation is opening new paths for women. Female entrepreneurs in Indonesia are taking up those opportunities of independence to start a business. But how do the young founders cope with the challenges posed by the role? All have had to overcome hurdles thrown up by traditional structures, widely accepted clichés and investors who prefer to bet on men.
- "The Code" is the first part of bauhausWORLD. The search for the secret of Bauhaus's enduring success leads all the way to Japan. This journey illustrates how the forced closure of the school drove the movement into exile but served to spread its philosophy around the world.
- Part 2 of bauhausWORLD, "The Effect", takes viewers on a journey from Dessau to New York, Älmhult in Sweden and Ulm in Germany to examine the influence that Bauhaus still exerts on art, design and architecture around the globe. Nowadays the name of Bauhaus has been transformed into a brand. Is it to blame for the modern world's obsession with design?
- The third and last part of Bauhaus World, "The Utopia", explores the influence of the Bauhaus philosophy on today's globalized society. What is its legacy? What became of its utopic visions of the future? Do they still have relevance in the 21st century? We find out if the questions that Bauhaus posed have been answered, and if we can still learn from the solutions it proposed 100 years ago.
- 2017–TV EpisodeAmid reports of right-wing extremist activity in the German police and armed forces, radical groups are said to be preparing a coup against the government. The federal Interior Ministry has promised to crack down on right-wing groups. Concerns are growing about reports of right-wing extremist activity in the German police and armed forces -- but senior officers and politicians seem reluctant to deal with the situation.
- Although antidepressants are prescribed with increasing frequency, their efficacy is the subject of debate. It's known that placebos can be just as effective in cases of mild-to-moderate depression. Nevertheless, in Germany you're now eight times more likely to be prescribed the medication than in the 1990s.