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- A murder is committed in an apartment building in Stockholm. The clues point toward the Justice of the Supreme Court and his sons.
- Lars Andersson's life is about to unravel. He doesn't like his job, he drinks too much and has gambling debts over his ears. His wife has grown tired of his constant cheating, taking their two-year-old son with her and leaving him for a pizza baker. He hasn't seen his father in six years. And he hasn't heard from his mother since she ran off with a boxer twenty-eight years ago. At the same time as his creditors begin to tighten the thumb screws, his dog Torbjörn dies. Andersson has had enough, decides to leave everything behind and go home to his father in his childhood Lysehamn to bury the dog. But on the way he is brutally stopped by a debt collector who offers to trade his debts for a commission job.
- The Swedish baron "Blix" - Bror von Blixen-Finecke (1886-1946) - once married to Karen Blixen, was an adventurer, womanizer, successful safari guide and failed coffee farmer in Kenya. Among his friends he counted Prince Wilhelm, the Prince of Wales and Ernest Hemingway. In the spring of 1940, he ran an American field hospital in Norway, where German troops were advancing.
- Three brothers, Abe, Ben and Josh work in a textile shop and live a relatively quiet life until one day when Josh is killed in front of Abe's eyes. Determined to solve the mystery surrounding his brother's death, Abe is drawn deeper into an underworld filled with prostitution where he meets Jill, a call girl who guides him in his brother's footsteps.
- In the criminal world there are strict rules. The young Sabri has broken the taboo of the criminals - he has run afoul of the police. Admittedly, he takes everything back in court, but the court believes Sabri and sentences his former comrades to prison. Now he is accepted neither in the underworld nor in society. What will Sabri do when he has everyone against him and nowhere to go? Is there anyone to trust?
- "The Swedes who fought for Hitler" - a three-part series about the Swedish citizens who voluntarily fought for Nazi-Germany during WWII. Some volunteers preferred anonymity. But strikingly many enjoyed being in the public eye, and were eager to talk about the battles and atrocities they took part in. The Second World War started in 1939, but it was with the attack on the Soviet Union in 1941 - Operation Barbarossa - that recruitment to the Axis powers took off. Adolf Hitler wanted the war to be more than just the battle of Nazism. And in the Nordic countries there were many interested.
- For two months, 13-year-old Marius from Arvika was suspected of the murder of 4-year-old Kevin. In the documentary Marius' family tells about the experiences from the murder investigation - long interrogations, illegal phone tapping and the judgment of those around them. The film also depicts the crisis work in Arvika in the fall of 1998 and the state part of Dottevik's way back to a normal life again.
- Swedish Television broadcasted all nine matches that Sweden participated in during the Word Cup 1958 in Sweden. It became the big breakthrough for television in Sweden. The Swedish Football Association concluded an agreement with Sveriges Radio TV, which was allowed to broadcast nine matches live for a total compensation of SEK 800,000.
- King Gustaf V, 84 years old, plays a doubles match in tennis with Nils Rohlsson against Harald Engström and Carl Erik Pettersson (Pettersson-Sweden). Bag with racket, ball and more. Racket and ball demonstrated. Åke Eliaesson shows the different strokes in tennis. Å Eliaesson and Mary Lagerborg played a training match, also in slow motion. Stig Mårtensson and Folke Norén, close-up. S Mårtensson and F Norén in a training match. Torsten Johansson in the dressing room. T Johansson runs in Lill-Jansskogen, jumps rope, plays tennis, showers. Dentist Sven Bramstång plays left and right handed. Karl Schröder receives Wiener bread from Ingvar Garell. K Schröder and S Mårtensson play tennis. K Schröder cools off in a bucket of water. Beginner competition in Flaten. Coach Folke Hallgren and beginners. The tennis courts in Haga and Kristineberg. Alvikshallen, exterior and interior. Torsten Örnberg and Lennart Bergelin play in the Royal Tennis Hall for the King's jug. T Örnberg wins and receives the award from King Gustaf V's hand. K Schröder and N Rohlsson in match. N Rohlsson's footwork, long sequence. Bandy player Gunnar Galin plays tennis. Sven Jerring and Sigfrid Siwertz in action with the racket. Inge Schröder and K Schröder play tennis, their boy in a pram.
- About Karl Rune Oskarsson 380925-2335, alcoholic - Kåge Jonsson directed this odd drama documentary based on the participants' own experiences and authentic journal entries about Karl Rune "Nollan" Oskarsson who "yo-yos" in and out of several detox centers and forced care. A hard-hitting piece of black and white Swedish social realism from the dark alleys of the welfare society, populated by the homeless outcast of Stockholm.
- What started as a search for someone to talk to, ended up with rape and a severe beating. About three young women who sold their bodies. Their cases have all led to convictions where the sex buyers were punished, but the women's wounds remain.
- Drama about the everyday lives of Swedish soldiers.
- In the fall of 1944, four ships sailed out of Finnish ports and headed west. On board were not only the core group of Finnish intelligence, but also hundreds of boxes of top-secret material on the Soviet military, as well as technical equipment for advanced signals intelligence. The intention was to seek sanctuary in Sweden for continued intelligence service. Several of the people involved in Operation Stella Polaris are still alive. One of them is Stig Axelsson, Swedish liaison specialist, occasionally active in Finland, in Finnish uniform. Now he and others tell about the strange turns of the operation, which ended with the secret boxes being burned at the Löfsta waste station in December 1960.
- At Alpgatan 57 in Stockholm, the Dahlberg family lives: the master painter Oscar Dahlberg and his children Karl-Göran and Lisa, his employees the bachelors Vicke and Fabbe, the maid Vivan and the new tenant Greta. On the other side of the farm, Oscar's sister Sofie lives with her fiance Ludde and son Gösta, who is the neighborhood mischief maker.
- Speaking without moving your lips is an ancient art, practiced very seriously already in ancient Egypt. Today's ventriloquists are mostly found in the entertainment world, although today's stand-up artists less often use a talking doll as a partner. Filmmaker Sandra Luckow, herself a ventriloquist from the United States, made a trip with her doll Juanito, who is from Mexico, to study the tradition and regrowth of the peculiar art.
- Tom Rakewell is informed one day by the mysterious messenger Nick Shadow that he has inherited a large fortune. He leaves his sweetheart Anne and follows Nick to London, where he allows himself to be swept up in a vortex of luxury and pleasure. But when the time is right, the devil comes to collect his debt.
- The horrors of the Holocaust and the loss of both mother and father has given Hédi Fried (1924-2022) a worry that cannot be calmed. She harbors hope for the future and a strong and stubborn belief that something like this will never happen again. Hédi Fried was a Swedish-Romanian author and psychologist. A Holocaust survivor, she passed through Auschwitz as well as Bergen-Belsen, coming to Sweden in July 1945 with the boat M/S Rönnskär.
- Documentary short showcasing the genius of jazz greats Coleman Hawkins, Roy Eldridge, Cozy Cole, and Milt Hinton, among others.
- In Sweden, time was not properly measured until the industrialization began. Time is, and always has been, a relative concept, and in tonight's film, the playwright Lars Norén, the composer Sven-David Sandström and the philosopher Marcia Sà Cavalcante, among others, talk about their view of time.
- Beginning at Bohu's fortress, Hans Villius guides viewers through Norway, a country whose history has often coincided with ours. It is a story not only of the death of Charles XII and Carolines in a blizzard on their way to disaster, but also of the German battleship sunk in the Oslo Fjord and of radical Norway's struggle for independence from Sweden.
- The man behind the films "One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest", "Amadeus" and "Hair". "The meaning of life is to live, and then tell about it," says Milos Forman. He has experienced war and oppression and was orphaned at an early age in what was then Czechoslovakia. In his films, he takes a stand for the little person, the individual who goes against the establishment, with sharpness, warmth and dark humor.
- Since its inception, the Narcotics Penal Code has been reformed on several occasions in order to clearly mark that drug use is not acceptable. In 1972, the maximum sentence for serious drug offenses was increased to ten years, which is the strictest time-limited sentence. Now, in 1982, some politicians want to go further with the criminalization of narcotics.
- He was 13 when he decided to become a philosopher. Today, he has comfortably passed retirement, but Georg Henrik von Wright - professor of philosophy and author - is still feverishly active around the world. With time-critical books such as "Science and Reason" and "The Myth of Progress" he has reached an increasingly large readership.
- A dance drama in three time frames; our own modern times, Dacke's 16th century and ancient worship. Fiddlers and villagers meet in the eternal ring dance of the ages. Tensions between man and woman, the magical charge of the night, the purifying and life-giving power of the spring in the cult dance of the summer night, either the time is now or then.
- It's about big feelings and groundbreaking ideas when approaching the Swedish author, pedagogue and feminist ideologue Ellen Key (1849 - 1926). She was one of the great cultural personalities of the last century. The whole world read her book Children's Century, whose radical ideas are only now beginning to be realized. She fought for female suffrage, for free love and for beauty in homes. She was a charismatic speaker and moved among writers and philosophers in Europe around the turn of the century. Today she is strangely forgotten. Ann Victorin went to Ellen Key's home Strand by the lake Vättern, to get to know her modern thoughts about her time.