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- An exciting piece of Berlin's cultural history from the time of the fall of the Berlin Wall to the vibrant present.
- Using extracts from individuals' diaries and some film records, this documentary series tells the story of the changes that occurred in Berlin (and Germany) during the pivotal year of 1933.
- Berlin's Tempelhof Airport was opened in 1923 and, under Adolf Hitler, extended to become the world's largest airport which was finally closed in 2008. But even today Tempelhof Airport remains a place of arrivals and departures being used simultaneously as a refugee shelter and a leisure park for the inhabitants of Berlin. A historically unique moment for a portrait of this city within a city, but also of a European society in a state of emergency, caught between crisis and utopia.
- A docudrama on John F. Kennedy's early travels through Europe with his best friend Lem Billings. A road trip that would lay the foundation for JFK's later love for Europe and its countries, such as Germany.
- Graphic designer and sculptor Käthe Kollwitz is one of the most important German artists. Her work is known around the world, fetching high prices at art auctions. Her memorial "Mourning Parents" in the soldiers' graveyard in Belgium is one of the most important sepulchral sculptures of the 20th century. Using her diaries and drawings, as well as conversations with descendants and international experts, the film sets out to discover one of the most charismatic women of the 20th century.
- A team of reporters start their journey with 2 vans and drive passing various stops on their way to Tokyo. On their way they stop to explore the culture of the country they are passing through.
- BANDITS (2003) retraces the roots of the escapade of a group of Georgians in their twenties who hijacked an Aeroflot passenger plane on November 18, 1983 from Tbilisi.
- Over the decades, almost half of the GDR spies working in the "Operation area" dealt with the procurement of scientific and technical top products. The SED leadership was primarily about economic survival as a whole. Western know-how was also used for maintaining power inside. Mielke's surveillance empire in particular was equipped with western top technology. For this order, the MfS created the "Commercial Coordination" area in 1966, abbreviated Koko, a foreign-acting network of companies that belonged to more than 150 trading companies, mailbox and other companies until the end of the GDR. Alexander Schalck-Golodkowski was head of the empire.