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- The 1980s in Czechoslovakia. The young talented sprinter Anna (Judit Bárdos) is selected for the national team and starts training to qualify for the Olympic Games. As a part of the preparation she is placed in a secret "medical programme" where she's getting doped with anabolic steroids. Her performance is getting better, but after she collapses at the training, she learns the truth about the drugs. Anna decides to continue in her training without the steroids even though her mother (Anna Geislerova) is worried that she won't be able to keep up with other athletes and might not qualify for the Olympics, which she sees as the only chance for her daughter to escape from behind the Iron Curtain. After Anna finishes the last in the indoor race, her mother informs the coach (Roman Luknar) that Anna is no longer using steroids. They decide to apply the steroids to Anna secretly, pretending it's nothing but doses of harmless vitamins.
- A documentary that captures the work of German politicians at parliamentary level; with Sahra Wagenknecht, the former leader of the left party, as an example.
- A filmmaker journey through the former East Germany looking into her father's 1999 suicide.
- A fatal Virus has turned the inhabitants of an entire city into ravenous Zombies. The future of a small group of survivors relies on the outstanding Martial Arts abilities of Chris Burnside. As their hideaway is attacked by a horde of the undead, they are forced to flee. Out of fuel, fighting their way through the woods they find an old mansion which holds the key to the infection, as well as other bad surprises. (c) hazard-themovie.com
- The aura of girls doesn't need the sun to glow. That is the essence of RP Kahl's documentary "Sunday Girls", which follows four young actresses - Laura Tonke, Nicolette Krebitz, Katharina Schuettler and Inga Birkenfeld - through different seasons and landscapes. Between naiveté and experience, wishes and wants the four women tell about their jobs with great honesty. They talk about theatre, about the myths of cinema and the magic of making the first film. They show how one needs to become stubborn and uncompromising to avoid getting lost in the demands of contemporary media. These four portraits never get too close and leave the women enough freedom to experiment in front of the camera. The struggle between acting and authenticity is always visible and makes this documentary so utterly fascinating to watch.
- Graffiti is variegated. As much variety as the styles does have the people doing it. Still one thing connects them all - the love of their art. From illegal street and train graffiti over classical style writing and time-consuming Murals till events, exhibitions, photography and media. Through short profiles you will be introduced to some of the greatest and most outstanding players of the German scene. Thereby you get authentic insights into the variety and quality of this scene.
- On New Year's Eve 2005, little Stella visits her grandma in the family home. Unknowingly she activates a time-travel machine and is transported back to the year 1905, where she meets some long-gone relatives when they were her age.
- The festival of folk music with Florian Silbereisen.
- In 2019 Germanys Federal Science Fair is held from May 16 to May 19 2019 in Chemnitz.
- Since March 2011 an war rages between the Assad Regime and several rebel groups. Once arose from the Arab Spring turned into a civil war. A war where the Internet plays a crucial role. This movie accompanies a group of Westerns net activists working to circumvent the surveillance of the internet by intelligence agencies, hold close contact to people in the country and get their pictures out of the country to be resented in our news.
- In Germany and Russia people drink the same amount: more than 10 liters of pure alcohol per capita and year. Two Germans and two Russians are "functioning" young alcoholics. All four are trying to quit drinking. Drinking has become so fused with our everyday life that we have become blind to it: As long as we function, we drink. As long as we drink, we function. How can we break this mechanism?
- The Belgian documentarian Frans Buyens interviewed passers-by in East Berlin and Dresden, factory workers and technical draftswomen at the Warnow shipyard in Stralsund, small business owners in Chemnitz, LPG farmers in the countryside, foreign students at the Gottfried Herder Institute in Leipzig and industrial workers in Magdeburg and Eisenhuettenstadt. "The GDR seen through the eyes of a foreigner" was the original title of the film.
- Squalid is the story about Simon who is creative and emotional in a critical situation. The exit seems to be neighbour Magdalena who knocks at his door and enters his bedroom. After a while things change when Simon enters Magdalenas world too deeply and the custodian appears. His emotional landscape turns upside down.
- A parasite suddenly attacks the earth and with it humanity. The parasite is closely related to the malaria parasite. It was first detected in the brain of chimpanzee.
- A young woman is offered a trip to the USA by a successful executive. Her boyfriend steals the tickets and they set off. But they get waylaid in Manchester, and the angry executive traces them, determined to get his revenge and get the girl.
- Nora loves wasps and hates piano music. And Nora is going to die soon. This is what the doctors say, but Nora just seems to stay alive - despite her physical and mental disabilities, she now became 30, outliving her loving mother and grandmother. She has never realized their death - her brother, however, makes a film about the loss and turns out to be closer to his sister than he realizes himself. Spanning a time of five years, this 70 minute portrait traces the dramatic changes in this once lively family as Nora's cheerful character remains unaware of all and ever the happy same.
- What would it be like if you could always protect everyone you love? Is that really desirable, or do you end up harming yourself?