- Since an accident, Susanna has been confined to a wheelchair and dependent on her daughter's care.
- Mother and daughter - this is a chapter in itself. Especially when both love the same man. Susanna Hagen travels the major cities of Europe as a buyer for a large fashion house. She shares her glamorous Berlin villa with her adult daughter Judith and her fiancé Georg Stahl, a talented archaeologist with a touch of Indiana Jones. When Susanna returns from a business trip a day earlier than planned, she not only witnesses the fall of the Berlin Wall, she also surprises her fiancé in bed with her own daughter. Horrified, she flees from the bedroom, stumbles and falls down the stairs so unluckily that she is paraplegic - it seems. Twelve years later: Georg has disappeared from the lives of the two women. Tormented by feelings of guilt, Judith takes care of the always nagging, wheelchair-bound Susanna. Mother and daughter have switched roles, the atmosphere in the Hagen home is like a permanent small war. Judith cannot lead a free, independent life, she only pulls through her job as a publisher's editor with great effort. When Georg, who had meanwhile become famous, returned to Berlin to open an exhibition, the situation came to a head. Because when Judith and Georg finally meet again and talk things out, it turns out that the jealous Susanna has been intriguing for years. She wrote letters to Georg on Judith's behalf, in which she presented her daughter as a happily married mother. And that's not all: There are increasing signs that Susanna even faked her paralysis for twelve long years: to punish her daughter, to bind her to her and prevent her from living with Georg.—ARD Das Erste
It looks like we don't have any synopsis for this title yet. Be the first to contribute.
Learn moreContribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content