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- Sophie Haas, an aspiring criminal investigator from Cologne, is relegated to a very small police outpost in the Eifel mountains.
- Alexander Bukow and Katrin König, together they make a great team for fighting crime - when they're not fighting each other.
- Luna and Sophie are childhood best friends who become SOKO detectives devoted to rid the streets of Potsdam from crime, they just have a slightly humorous way of doing it.
- A show about students at a boarding school in Erfurt.
- SOKO Wismar is a German crime series.
- The story of a young and nice witch who learns everything there is to know about magic, in order to be accepted by the other older mean witches.
- She Can See Her Future, But Can't Escape Her Past.
- A young woman whose boyfriend died is trying to find her way back into life.
- A journalist gets caught up in a terrorist plot in Moscow while investigating the Russian secret service.
- King Sigismund orders his son Nikolas to finally get married and become a proper heir to the throne. Nikolas, failing to fall in love of an even properly date, the king arranges a politically suitable bride, spinster princess Anneline. Enjoying his last 'free man days' incognito, gallivanting with his trusted squires, athletic Nikolas goes swimming but nearly drowns. When he beaches up, Anneline falls in love with the handsome stranger but rides on to court. Nikolas's party tries to thank the mystery woman who rescued him, ignoring its sea god Neptune's rebellious daughter, mermaid Undine, who has such a bad crush that she accepts the sea witch Mydra's deal to change her tail into legs but render her deaf and end her life unless she finds true love. She becomes Nikolas's favorite playmate, but he seems determined to do his dynastic duty by wedding princely.
- Princess Aurinia goes with her maid Lisa to the castle of King Ewald, his son Ivo, to whom she is promised as a wife. On the way, Lisa forces the princess into a role reversal, her secret plan is that she herself wants to be queen.
- A girl is staying with her grandparents for the summer, where she meets a horse called Mississippi. Trouble begins when Mississippi is about to be sold, a fight for Mississippi begins.
- The wrenching story of a woman sentenced in 1934 to 10 years in prison for antifascist activities. The love between her and her fiancé enables her to survive the tribulations of her time in prison, where she is one of few political prisoners.
- In a sleepy village of Brandenburg (near Berlin), bachelor Horst Krause lives a quite life with his sister as constable and farmer, nothing more exciting or erratic then dreamer . When adventurous sailor Albert arrives to inquire about an artist he knew from the sole passage of a traveling circus, Horst suspects it may be her and his son. That turns out true and the men get along, but it's hard to fit in their own life, or just the kick it needed.
- When Malu meets her dream man Hannes, she feels like she's on cloud nine. However, the closer she gets to know him, the more sinister he seems to her.
- Alfons lives with his grandparents on a Silesian village farm at the end of WWII. He adores his grandmother, who runs everything after her husband dies. But everything changes after the appearance of a traveling showman in the xenophobic village.
- Retired Chief Krause and sister manage an inn, facing cultural clashes and personal dilemmas. Helping a friend and a Syrian family, Krause navigates challenges, finding happiness in aiding others amidst unexpected family visits.
- As every year, police chief Krause prepares for the traditional Christmas dinner with his two sisters Elsa and Meta in their inn in idyllic Schönhorst in Brandenburg.
- The last decade (1937-47) of poet Hans Fallada's life. He lives with his family in Carwitz. His craving for harmony collides with the circumstances of the times and his own inner turmoil. He writes already anything of note, drinks, and takes pills. His wife Anna sees him through his times of darkest depression, tolerating his overt aggression and his affair with housemaid Anneliese. But once he begins a relationships with the manufacturer's widow Ursula Losch, Anna finally demands a divorce. His love for pretty, young Ursula gives him a new thirst for life, but only briefly. She is a morphine addict and pulls him further down into the abyss. The high times are followed by increasingly deeper low times. After the war ends, the Red Army sets him up as a mayor, but he fails to function in such an unfamiliar position and numbs himself with more alcohol and morphine. He goes to Berlin, and at friends' insistence he writes in a short time the poem "Everyone Dies Alone." Yet physically, his body has been pushed beyond its limits and he winds up in a hospital, where he dies in February 1947.
- One evening in the mid-sixties, Rolf Anschütz, a chef who runs a small restaurant in a town called Suhl in the middle of the East German province of Thuringen offers his guests a unique and exotic meal - Japanese Sukiyaki. It was intent to be a surprise for some of his best customers and it became a great success. Even the local paper wrote about it - and this should change the life of Rolf Anschütz forever. A couple of days after the "event" a real Japanese turned up at the restaurant and demanded the same meal again. From this moment there was no way back. The Japanese loved Rolf Anschütz cooking and his restaurant "Der Waffenschmied" (Gunsmith) soon was honored as the place which offered the best and most authentic Japanese cuisine outside Japan. In the shortest time the Japanese have accepted Rolf Anschütz as one theirs. They celebrate the Authenzität of his kitchen and the "original" Japanese washing rituals before the meals would be served. First diplomats, later Japanese economic bosses and sports delegations were sitting in the pool of the now famous restaurant "Waffenschmied - Japanese department" - naked and side by side with government officials and the brigades of the East German working class. And because the omnipresent communist party cannot close the popular place any more, the state security better known as Stasi took also their seat in the pool. The party soon discovered Rolfs restaurant as a foreign currency bringer and allowed the import of Japanese food and exotic ingredients from a delicatessen importer from West Germany. And while Rolfs Anschütz, in the meantime, wearing kimonos and East German geisha's on his side, philosophies about the peaceful coexistence of the people in the World his restaurant turns into the only really existing "theme park" in East Germany. Who wanted to go for a meal, must order two years in advance - at the end it will be 2 million guests!
- The village policeman Krause suddenly has a circulatory collapse. His family doctor immediately prescribes him a cure at the Baltic Sea.
- "Why can't everything just stay the way it is?" asks Krause at the beginning of the story. At Sunday lunch, he realized with indignation that Paula had changed the inn's menu and now offers vegetarian dishes. He reacts furiously to Mayor Stübner's idea to transform Schönhorst into a holiday village. Everyone in town is talking about the future, has everyone conspired against him? State Secretary Hummel has her eye on Krauses pastures. The dry field, which hardly gives the horses any food, would be an ideal location for wind turbines. Meta wants to accept the purchase offer, but Krause is strictly against it. He stands alone in an argument with his sister: Elsa has no opinion on this. When Krause meets the singer Fanny again, he gets to know her elderly father. What kind of perspective does the centenarian have when the coal mine devours his house? Krause slowly begins to understand that he has to do something for the future. What has to change so that everything can stay the way it is?