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1-15 of 15
- 31-year-old Tristan remembers the time when he was 15 and had just hit puberty. But he is not alone in this; he is with a large group of friends: Specki, a fat kid who is always stuffing himself; Streusel, a cheeky boy covered with spots; Tümai, a pretty Turkish girl; Kerstin, best friend of Tümai and very sporty; Elrond, with a heavy stutter, but regardless extremely popular and good looking; Lars and Simone, so far the only couple in the class, who spend most of their time smooching; and Long Jana, a girl who is at least 6 foot tall and extremely skinny. Tristan has just developed a huge crush on Kerstin, but is too shy to do anything about it. As if that weren't enough, his parents, both psychoanalysts, separate, which puts an abrupt end to childhood naivete. Tristan is supposed to move town at the end of the school year. But time is too short to grow grey hair. The friends experience awkwardness at dance school, masturbation, and first fantasies of the opposite sex, amateur school theatre, the first real party with lots of alcohol, strip poker etc. The biggest interest is, of course, to get ahead with the girls, which often ends up in very funny situations. Their mutual enemy is Simone's father, who beats her until Tristan finally works up the courage to stop him. On Tristan's last day, when all his friends come to say goodbye, Kerstin is missing. To his surprise, she is waiting on the swing in front of Tristan's new home. This is the beginning of a long, deep love, which leaves Tristan with the knowledge that he experienced something extraordinary, which most people never will.
- Five "older" actresses vying for the same role decide to walk out on their audition. They end up on a road trip full of adventures and revelations.
- On behalf of anonymous business clients, Philipp Keyser is trying to track down a missing painting. This is his chance to get back on his feet professionally. As a result, he has no qualms about using the young painter Alma in order to get closer to the painting's owner. His search for the painting and the closeness to Alma, however, draw him into a vortex in which love and guilt are dangerously intermingled and at the center of which a picture shimmers.
- If you rest, you rust - at least that's what the old adage says. For this reason, the best friends Klaus and Fred have made some plans for their time in early retirement. They sold their hotel together with a heavy heart but at a profit. Now they want to enjoy life with their wives Mary-Lou and Hanne and fulfill a few long-cherished dreams. That's the theory. In reality, Klaus and Fred spend a large part of their time on the shared sailing boat on the Wannsee, while their wives sit at home annoyed and feel hopelessly neglected. But even the two would-be sea dogs are getting bored with beer and bratwurst on their decked-out boat. Until one day they have to come to the aid of a young woman in distress at sea: 20-year-old Franziska is heavily pregnant and her boyfriend left her overnight. Now she is without a job, without an apartment and without prospects and doesn't know where to go. At first, Fred reacts a little harshly to the uninvited guest and would like to bring the girl back to shore as quickly as possible. In Klaus, on the other hand, who had always wanted children, the fatherly gentleman awakens. He can convince his friend to give Franziska shelter on the boat. Otherwise he would like to take care of the desperate young woman and make sure that she does not have to give her baby up for adoption. However, he doesn't tell his wife Mary-Lou about the relief operation any more than Fred tells his Hanne - the ladies shouldn't worry about it unnecessarily. However, they don't do that anyway. Rather, Mary-Lou decides to look for a job, and so she takes care of the slightly eccentric senior Gustav Wittke, while Hanne finds a sensitive admirer in his doctor Hans Schuster, who gives her all the attention that she so painfully sees at Fred missing. Meanwhile, Klaus has an entirely different reason for keeping Franziska's sudden appearance from his wife - a reason that dates back to a misstep 21 years ago.
- The baby with the gold tooth.
- The Matthiesens seem to have a deep penchant for failure in the family - as does their rough-and-tumble nature. Accordingly, father Matthiesen welcomes his daughters after many years of radio silence: "You have aged harshly." But that can't scare Esther, Rahel and Thirza. Firstly, they know their old man and secondly, there is no other home for the stranded people. The run-down riding stable today has little in common with the idyll of their childhood, when they dreamily saw an endless prairie in the heathland. Their father has been drinking since their mother left the family, and the girls later gradually left. Besides the schnapps, Matthiesen only has one friend, the indestructible veterinarian Gernot Rantzer. The loner has to get used to his daughters again, especially since each of them has enough problems with them. Esther, fearing for her job, hides her messed up son David from the police. Rahel is currently digesting an entrepreneurial landing with her ambitious fashion label. And "nest hook" Thirza, who has never really found her feet, dreams of a life as a writer. Now, of all times, the Matthiesen daughters' last refuge is in danger of disappearing: If their father can't pay back the loans in a few days, the bank will make short work of it and seize all of their property. But this awakens unexpected powers in the stubborn clan.
- Despite all the differences: the catering entrepreneur Louise and the business journalist Felix maintain a deep friendship. Louise doesn't fit Felix's dream of a girly type at all and Felix is much too nervous and feminine for Louise.