Der Bergdoktor is a drama TV show centered around a male physician who practices medicine in the beautiful setting of the alps. He faces various medical cases including treating broken limbs, sports injuries, and providing first aid. The show takes place in a picturesque hillside village.
Der Bergdoktor is a German-Austrian medical drama television series, broadcast in 96 episodes between 1992 and 1997.
Series written by Christiane Sadlo about writer and journalist under the pseudonym "Inga Lindström" and her family. Characterized by impressive landscapes, all of which are shot on location in Sweden. Series has no continuous storyline, and each episode is filled with new characters.
Hubert und Staller follows the hilarious duo of police officers solving crimes in an idyllic setting of southern Germany. With a dead body turning up in every episode, Hubert and Staller embark on entertaining investigations and navigate through the complexities of small-town policing.
The Black Forest Clinic follows the lives of doctors and nurses at a medical practice in southern Germany. It explores various medical emergencies, patient cases, and family affairs. The show provides a glimpse into the idyllic setting of the Black Forest, while also delving into the personal lives of the characters.
Barbarian Queen is a 1985 fantasy movie set in a village that is raided by a group of warriors. The warrior queen, seeking revenge, embarks on a mission to rescue her people and defeat the enemy. The film explores themes of survival, revenge, and female empowerment.
The pony hotel has just been opened, but so far no guests have arrived. Dick gets Ralf to design a brochure about the hotel. The girls and Ethelbert then lead the village children on horseback to Lübeck, where they all distribute the brochure - not knowing that Dalli has added some embellishments to the text.
As You Like It is a romantic comedy about Rosalind, who disguises herself as a man to escape her uncle's wrath. She finds love and confusion ensue as she navigates the complexities of gender roles and the power of nature in the Forest of Arden.
Heidi, a young orphan girl living with her aunt in Frankfurt, is forced to move to the Swiss Alps to live with her ornery grandfather. At first, he resents her presence, but, after a short while, Heidi manages to pierce his gruff exterior, and the two become close. She also befriends a young shepherd named Peter. After three years, Heidi's aunt arrives and demands Heidi's return to Frankfurt.
In colonial India, a courageous British officer must lead his troops in a fierce battle against Indian rebels. With the fate of the British Empire at stake, he must navigate the treacherous battlefield and form unlikely alliances to ensure victory.
After her mother's death, the five year old orphan Heidi is brought by her aunt to her grumpy grandfather Alp, who leads a hermit life in the beautiful Swiss mountains. Heidi's natural cheerfulness quickly brings renewed joy in grandfather Alps life. Heidi becomes friends with the goatherd Peter who is about the same age as her and spent two beautiful years in the pasture. But then she is sent by her aunt to Frankfurt in the house of Consul Sesemann where Heidi should get a proper education and upbringing. After some initial difficulties Heidi eventually adjusts to her new situation and makes friends with Clara, the paralyzed daughter of the consul. Only with the strict governess Miss Rottingmeier she keeps getting in trouble. Miss Rottingmeier clearly can not cope with the free and outdoors spirit of Heidi. But Heidi lets a fresh wind blow through the Sesemann house and even causes Clara to overcome her illness.
A young woman pharmacist, Eva, is very friendly with a children's doctor, Dr. Fröhlich. Eva's small nephew Peter lives with her and she is often thought to be his mother. A number of amusing and more serious misunderstandings arise from this situation...
Sauerland, autumn 1995: In the middle of the forest on the Wilzenberg, a walker finds the body of high school graduate Sonja Risse. However, the fact that the killer left a music box with the lullaby "Hush Little Baby" at the crime scene does not lead to a clear solving. 25 years later, the investigative journalist Stefanie Schneider, known as "Mütze", made a surprising discovery in Cologne. In a disused multi-storey car park, she films an undressed corpse of a man with a music box running next to it! When her colleague Jan Römer, who reported on the spectacular Sonja case as a young journalist in 1995, recognizes the melody from back then, he immediately believes there is a connection. He goes to Wilzenberg with his ambitious colleague to interview Sonja's mother Maria, her former teacher Waldheim and her best friends. The more the journalists compile, the clearer the contradictions and gaps that the investigators should have noticed at the time.