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1-50 of 74
- Öllers and Niederländer have everything under control. For the past six years, the two successful business consultants have been traveling through some of the seediest countries around the world in order to satisfy their clients' greed.
- Launched in 2018, the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline project will come to fruition in October 2021: the 1,230 kilometers of pipes built under the Baltic Sea are complete. Connecting the village of Bolshoi Kuziomkino in Russia to the city of Lubmin in Germany, the pipeline follows the route of its big brother, Nord Stream 1, which has been operating since 2012. Two months later, just as the pipeline was about to be inaugurated, Germany warns that the pipeline will not be approved if the escalation with Ukraine escalates. In February 2022, Europe's major gas supplier invaded its neighbor, and Chancellor Olaf Scholz halted the pipeline's certification process as part of the sanctions against Russia.
- Recollects the filmmaker's experience in 1990 when he staged a play by Heiner Müller, "Anatomie Titus Fall of Rome". Sven Behrendt was one of the young actors, whom the director follows from 1999 through 2005. The word Neger in the title refers to the statement "Ich bin ein Neger" of the playwright Heiner Müller.
- 1,300 years ago, the east of today's Germany between the Elbe and the Oder was almost deserted. But then strangers from the east, Slavs, enter the fertile land. They settle in the 7th century AD.
- In the fall of 2013, Ukraine became involved in a tug-of-war between the EU and Russia. Both wanted to tie the country closer to them. Extensive protests broke out in the country when it appeared that the then president had canceled the negotiations with the EU on a rapprochement. The center of the protests was Maidan Square in Kyiv. The consequences of the protests were both far-reaching and dramatic.
- Through the Trianon Peace Treaty (signed in 1920) Hungary lost two thirds of its territories around 100 years ago. Every third Hungarian suddenly lived abroad. In total there are 1.8 million Hungarians who live in other countries such as Slovakia, Ukraine or Romania. Families were torn apart, the economy collapsed. The large Kingdom of Hungary - part of the powerful Habsburg dual monarchy - became a small country. In the summer of 2020, the Hungarian head of government inaugurated a controversial monument: the monument to national unity. The walls are engraved with the names of more than 12,500 places that once belonged to Hungary before the borders in Europe were redrawn by the victorious powers after World War I. Victor Orbán has been courting foreign Hungarians with one-two passports and voting rights for years. The neighboring countries are alarmed. This leads to tensions and conflicts in Europe. Outrage, anger and sadness. The feelings of Hungarians at that time are still alive today and it is not only nationalists and right-wing radicals who try to make political capital out of them. The documentary examines the question: How is it possible that an event that took place one hundred years ago can have such far-reaching consequences and still be politically relevant today?
- Years ago, the two Poles Juliusz (92) and Krzysztof (77) decided to drop out. Since then, the wilderness on the shore of the Polish Lake Solina - far away from civilization - has been her home.