Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-27 of 27
- A man struggles after his release from ten years as a political prisoner.
- Love and Revolution is a story that puts the years of youth at its center. These are the years in which humankind feels the sense of belonging, the urge to take root in life in the strongest way.
- Metin and his family are devout Muslims living in Cologne. The young man discovered religion through his father figure Hüseyin, in the head of the Islamic community. When Hüseyin launches an investment fund, Metin convinces his family and friends to put all their savings in it.
- This heartbreaking TV movie focuses on the first generation of Turkish migrant workers coming to Germany in the 1960s. Melike and Mustafa grow up in a small village of Ürgüp, Nevsehir in the central part of Turkey. She dreams of marrying him until he and his friend Kadir decide to leave their home country to work in Germany. After two years, the young woman must marry the much-older Yasar although she does not love him. For financial reasons, Melike also emigrates to the "golden West" and starts working in a factory. She reunites with Mustafa, now working as a photograph artist, and revives their romance, but one day, Yasar is standing at her door.
- Mehmet Umut, a Turkish immigrant, lives in Cologne with his wife and his little son. After his residence permit expired, on an early morning he is roused from his sleep and taken into custody by the police. He is deported to Turkey on the same day. His family stays behind, terrified and helpless.
- Heinrich Lutter (Götz George) is an unemployed locksmith. He lives with his two sons Mike (Markus Knüfken) and Günni (Bastian Trost) in Cologne, Ehrendfeld - a worker's district. Both need his unrestricted attention: Mike has a police record and Günni is mentally handicapped from birth. His only stability is his camper - for him it is a symbol of liberty and a fulfilled life in Italy. But his dream "on four wheels" is confiscated by public authority. Although, Heinrich Lutter stands firm. He is convinced that he attained it by honest means, and is determined to realize his visions of the future. Mike's conflicting convictions and his criminal machinations puts the timid approximation to a severe test in this sensitive narrated environmental study.
- Tomix, Tam-Tam and Mützen-Jacky are children of the street earning their living with music. They travel from one town to the other with their instruments to perform in the streets and in restaurants. Making music is the only thing they have ever learned. They are led by old Mahmud, an alcoholic. He is the one who concludes the business and takes in the money.
- It's what the fans always wanted to see: stories from behind the scenes of the legendary TV Series "Linden Street". While shooting as a camera crew, even we became involved in the cult series. Mr. Willi showed us the neighborhood he grew up in Cologne-Mülheim and Sybille Waury gave us some insights into her (harmonic) everyday work life.
- Christiansen is a controller of the seafarers union and controls the ships in the port of Hamburg. His mission is to expose the so-called "flag of convenience-ships". He sneaks around on the ferries in the port of Hamburg dressed like a tourist, and inspects the galleys, berths, and lounge rooms of seafarers, to talk with them about their salaries. "It is more common than not that shipping companies deceive sailors into working for cheap wages." says Christiansen, a member of the International Seamen's Union ITF. Most important to him is ensuring that the minimum wage is being strictly adhered to, and if necessary he will enforce this by going on strike. And if the ship owner lets down his crew, the ship may even be sent to auction .
- In the Kurdish village "Youngest Heart" not only the walls are unconventional, but also the people. They care about their domestic animals and are sons of the soil. The outside World is of little interest to the villagers. Thirteen-year-old "Devil" Pascha and his gang are always to blame for anything that adds to the chaos in the village. With enthusiasm and cheekiness, he plays pranks on the others, be it the Mullah of the Village, his mother or his sister. His wild temperament and tricks only lead to more disorder between the children and the adults in the village. One day a fat German soprano singer visits the village. She wants to live there for a while to write her doctoral thesis on Kurdish folk dancing and singing. The feudal lord Ali Aga, the Mullah, and in fact all the men, dream of marrying the yellow-haired woman. She does not understand what is going on in the village, but "Devil" Pascha does and uses this get up to new mischief. At the beginning there is commotion, but as time goes by, the woman becomes part of village life. Her singing gets increasingly louder and she even sings in Kurdish. While the villagers start to show an interest in the stranger, the war draws closer and threatens to envelop them. The fat yellow haired woman abandons her folk dances and singing and develops into an alert observer of the situation as the region turns into a military zone. Due to the precarious circumstances, the villagers insist that their guest, whom they have grown very fond of, leave the village. For "Devil" Pascha and his friends, the time of growing up begins. They join the partisans.