The 2015 re-release with 4k restoration is in 7 parts.
Heimat was one of Stanley Kubrick's favorite films.
Presented at the Rencontres Cinématographiques de Digne-les-Bains (1985).
After watching Holocaust (1978), Edgar Reitz was offended by the American 'melodramaticisation' of the tragic events and the positive reception the film received. In 1979, Reitz began to make notes of his own life and completed a 250-page screenplay draft based upon his youth. Later in the year, Reitz contacted Peter Steinbach and together after what was planned to be a single night, they stayed for the next thirteen months in a small hut in Woppenroth writing a script. They became friendly with the local villagers and invited them to comment on the characters and incidents in the story. In 1980, Reitz and Steinbach completed a 2,000-page screenplay. The success of Berlin Alexanderplatz had convinced television production companies that there was a market for sagas. After some haggling, Reitz managed to secure funding for the length of the script and remodeling of five Hunsrück villages.
The co-producer, public broadcaster WDR, feared calling the project "Heimat" would awaken too many emotions or feelings that Germans still hoped to overcome back then.