Author Topic: TV Shows - A Decade in Retrospect  (Read 9715 times)

Offline DJ Doena

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TV Shows - A Decade in Retrospect
« on: January 03, 2010, 12:26:55 AM »
Since everybody seems to be starting to count at zero instead of one the first decade of this century and millennium is now over. So it's time to recap these past ten years and take a look at the TV Shows it has given us.

Let me give my résumé at the beginning: Of the four decades I know TV Shows from (70s - 00s) this was without question the best decade for us TV junkies. When you read my review you might say in the end "Hey what about <insert your favourite here>?" (e.g. The Sopranos, Dexter, The Wire, Six Feet Under, ...) but that's exactly my point. This decade has given us so many outstanding shows that it was impossible to watch them all. Also, everybody has a different set of favourite genres but I'd say that every genre got their fair share of excellent series in the last years.

But let's face it: There's rarely any series (if there's one at all) that could keep up the quality and it's appeal for its entire run. Some had a bad year in between, some fell short at the end. But even in these "bad years" they had more quality episodes in it than entire shows from previous decades. So all the shows I am going to name have of course aspects that can be criticized and I invite you to do so.

For me the most outstanding characteristic of this past decade's shows is that they are more often than not more about the "journey" of the character(s) than the actual events. It's not the character who shines a light upon the unfolding events but it's the events that shine a light upon the character and his development. I have to say that shows (hereby excluding comedy shows that work with stereo- and archetypes) that don't have a real character development don't interest me at all. But if the character development is interesting I might even watch shows from genres that usually don't interest me at all.

If the character development is interesting enough I might even set the fact aside that my second favourite characteristic is missing: A real story-arc.  The first TV Show in my TV universe that had a real story-arc, was Babylon 5. Later Star Trek: DS9 did the same albeit not in that quality and complexity. But these shows were two of the rare exception in the 90s (another famous exception would be Twin Peaks, but I never watched it). It seemed that viewers weren't interested in either developing characters or story-arcs.

This drastically changed in this decade and one show had an early start to this:

Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997-2003)

I believe Buffy is one of the most studied TV Shows there is, possibly only surpassed by the Star Trek universe and comparing the age of both franchises one sees how truly amazing that is. Just take a look at Slayage Online to get a glimpse.
I had of course heard of Buffy but ignorant as I was I did not watch a single episode during it's original run. It was only in the year 2007, three years after the show had ended, that I discovered it for me and it swept me of my feet. This show does not deal in black & white, every character is flawed and yet tries to contribute in the ultimate fight against evil.
For me there's not one season I'd qualify as "bad" even though some of them are very different than the others.

Angel (1999-2004)

On the dawn of the new millennium Angel relocated from Sunnydale to Los Angeles and opened a second front against the apocalypse. The show was different from Buffy but the characters were still wonderfully drawn and the story was very good. The show had its down during the fourth season which I didn't like that much but got better again only to get cancelled. But it went out with a BOOM. "Let them fight the good fight. Someone has to fight the war."

And then the new millennium began.

24 (2001-)

"All Events Occur in Real-Time." This show introduces a whole lot of concepts in a TV Show. Since everything happens "live" they depend heavily on split-screens to show multiple events in different places. It's also one of the first shows that uses technology to a sometimes ludicrous extend. But its compact and thrilling story-telling totally makes up for it.
There have been years where the story absolutely jumps the shark, especially the fourth and fifth season. But then the writers manage to refresh it again end they've delivered a real highlight with the seventh season and I truly hope they can keep it up in the soon-to-begin eighth year.

Alias (2001-2006)

The show surely declined during its five-year run but overall it's a fascinating piece of television, with its elaborate Rambaldi-arc and its shifting allies and enemies. It especially wins it fascination from all these grey characters where it isn't certain on which side they're on (for now) and what their hidden agenda is. It also uses a remarkable amount of plot locations all over the world that coincides with the number of wigs the main character Sydney Bristow seems to have. ;)

Smallville (2001-)

Smallville is a complicated topic. The label says "How Clark Kent became Superman". On its face it's a show about teenage drama mixed with some action pieces. Many don't like it because it often breaks with the official Superman canon (whatever that means in a comic universe that retcons itself all the time...). Others have problems with Clark himself who is not yet the iconic character he's supposed to become. Still others had problems with the prolonged presence of Lana Lang and the very existence of the not-in-the-comic character Chloe Sullivan. And they are supported in their criticism by the often kitschy storylines and the Freak-of-the-Week episodes in the early seasons. The show also lacks a mastermind who has a clear idea of where the journey is supposed to end up. This was painfully obvious during the seventh and eighth season that fell flat on every aspect of story-telling.
But still, the show has something that draws me in - even though I never read a single Superman comic. Despite their problems the characters are really enjoyable and most of them undergo a real development. If I had to name a favourite character (excepting Clark) it would be Allison Mack's Chloe Sullivan even though they heavily damaged the character in the last two years. The second one is Erica Durance's Lois Lane who is slowly taking the place that is rightfully hers.
I have to admit I was nearly giving up on the show but the ninth season is developing really great so far - let's just hope they can keep it up this time.

Firefly (2002)

Maybe it was so good because it was so short-lived but the 14 episodes of this series showed a potential worthy of a Joss Whedon (Buffy, Angel) show. This show literally brought the wild west into space. One has to wonder what this show could have achieved if it would have had a reasonable lifetime.

Two and a Half Men (2003-)

Sitcoms have always been era-bound for me. I've watched many sitcoms during their original run. When I watched them again years later I didn't find them as funny as the first time or don't find them really funny at all anymore. Maybe all the sitcoms in this list will fare the same fate. But for now I really enjoy the two brothers, their house-keeper, their mother and their son/nephew very much.

Battlestar Galactica (2003-2009)

Most sci-fi shows are plot-oriented. The spaceship that flies from planet to planet to go where no one has gone before. The station that is the last hope for peace. The team that searches for technology to protect Earth from the Evil Overlords. The fleet around the Galactica also has a goal: to find Earth. But the story is about the crew of these ships and about their robotic enemies who are as diverse as the Humans. In the end it's not as simple as in the beginning: Humans vs. Cylons. The journey will re-shape all of them in a way none of them could have anticipated.
Unfortunately the end was a bit disappointing because the writers thought too late about where the journey is supposed to be going.

House M.D. (2004-)

House is a typical Procedural. Basically every episode has the same general plot. If that were everything to it, I would not bother to watch it. But it is more. All the other characters sum up to a counter-balance to House, to keep him in check. While House spirals down in his medication addiction they try to pull him up again and they manifest as a wall when he tries to go too far. Every one of them is necessary and due to recent events in the sixth season I fear that one element will be sorely missed in future episodes: Humanity. They have to find a way to restore the balance. House doesn't work with just House.

LOST (2004-2010)

A great mystery show that will hopefully have an end this year that is worthy of it. For me the entire appeal of the show depends now on if they manage to give satisfying answers to all (or at least most of) the riddles they produced over the last five years. Otherwise it might have the same fate as Battlestar Galactica. They promised that they would have a satisfying end in mind - let's hope they can keep this promise. If they do this will be one of the most memorable shows of this decade.

Veronica Mars (2004-2007)

After the 80s I was never to much into private investigation stories but this show was highly praised - even though German television dump-aired it in the middle of the night. And it rightfully got the praise. It combines teenage drama and crime/PI stories to an excellent mix and has an excellent cast, especially the ones of the Mars family. Unfortunately the third season deviated from the way the story was told in the first two seasons and the show never got a fourth season. But these three seasons are absolutely worth checking out.

Bones (2005-)

Another Procedural that combines technological overdose and a relatively strict plot pattern. But it has a fascinating set of characters who complement each other (both at work as well as emotionally). Just with House I do not watch it for the case of the week but to see how the characters grow and how they struggle with their past and try to find their future.

Doctor Who (2005-)

The Brits are different. But that doesn't make them less interesting. The Doctor is a national institution just like the Queen. The show as a whole has been running since 1963 with a big break during the nineties. In 2005 they revived the show and the Ninth Doctor and his companion Rose took the TARDIS and travelled to the end of the Earth. The Tenth Doctor even took it to the end of the universe itself. And in 2010 the Eleventh Doctor will take command of ship and he too will travel to places and times one can hardly imagine.
In order to like Doctor Who one has to like a certain kind of humour and has to appreciate weird stories and ideas. To give you an idea: If you like/disliked the The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy book series by Douglas Adams or the "Thursday Next" book series by Jasper Fforde or the Australian TV Show Farscape you're probably going to like/dislike Doctor Who.

How I Met Your Mother (2005-)

In one regard sitcoms are like all other shows: There are those that are episode-based and those that are arc-based and then there are those in the middle. While Two and a Half Men and The Big Bang Theory are more (though not strictly) episode-based, so is HIMYM more arc-based. The very title points to it. In this regard HIMYM is the successor of Friends; the live of the characters is actually changing and not a (relative) constant.
Although, now that the show is in its fifth year I feel that it is time that Ted actually meets his future wife. I don't have the desire to drag out every show endlessly. I prefer a good closure over a never-ending story.

Supernatural (2005-2010?)

Two things brought me to Supernatural: Firstly my disappointment of Smallville over the last two years. While reading and writing in the KryptonSite.com forums I often read good comments about this show that otherwise totally went below my radar. Secondly my getting closer to the horror genre by watching Buffy and Angel. I've never been a great friend of the horror genre and probably never will be - but this show intrigued me. At first it looked like a standard Monster-of-the-Week show but soon it developed its own story-arc that is culminating in this year's battle against the apocalypse and Lucifer himself.
According to the show runner, this will be the last year of Dean's and Sam's journey and I really like that idea because then the show has managed something many shows fail to do: To tell one big story and to bring that story to a defined end.

Heroes (2006-)

Heroes is now in its fourth year and it's doubtful whether there will be a fifth. It started with great promise and the first year was really great. But then basically everyone lost their way and the characters started to act uncharacteristically and erratically and unpredictably and it all went down the drain. I am still watching it because I like the characters but it's not nearly as much fun as in the beginning.
If you're new to this show, buy the first season and probably leave it that.

The Big Bang Theory (2007-)

The best sitcom there currently is. The four geeks and their hot neighbour are a really great ensemble and the hilariousness goes up to eleven when Penny and Sheldon clash into each other. There's nothing I can laugh more about than these five.

Burn Notice (2007-)

I don't even remember how I stumbled across this show but Michael Westen is basically James Bond and Q in one person. He's the spy who builds his gadgets himself. His entourage is also great: The trigger-happy ex-IRA ex-girlfriend, the now retired former spy and friend - and his mother.  Since he can't work as spy anymore he has become the local MacGyver / Michael Knight / A-Team of Miami, Florida. He still tries to get his old "job" back but there is someone who does not want him back and Michael has no idea, why.

Chuck (2007-)

Chuck is an action comedy about a guy who accidentally gets all the secrets of the CIA and NSA uploaded into his brain. What makes things worse: His knowledge is now the only copy in existence. He gets two personal bodyguards: The CIA agent Sarah Walker and the NSA Major John Casey. The three of them try to use Chuck's knowledge to protect the country while hiding the fact that he knows what he knows and without getting exposed as spies by enemies and family.
This show is pure fun and I am really glad that they got a third season. The three main characters are great but all the supporting characters from Chuck's family and the Buy More superstore form a great ensemble.

True Blood (2008-)

There are Vampires in the world and they live openly among us. But not only Vampires, but also mind-readers and shape-shifters and others. And in Bon Temps, Louisiana the waitress Sookie Stackhouse meets Bill - the very first Vampire in their small town. But mankind has still getting used to the idea that Vampires actually exist and there are quite a few animosities between both groups, especially when people get killed and it looks like Vampires were behind it.
This is a very graphic show based on the "Sookie Stackhouse" book series by Charlotte Harris. But it's quite fascinating to watch all these different people and how they deal with life (and death).

Being Human (2009-)

A Vampire, a Werewolf and a Ghost are moving in together. What sounds like a joke is basically the question that what it means to be Human. All three struggle with themselves and their fate. The Vampire is the oldest one; he's fought as a young man in the First World War. The other two have only recently become "different". This British series is not a comedy although it is funny at times and as most British series relatively short (the first season has only six episodes). But the story it's telling is really worth watching.


So, that's it. Let's hope that this new decade can at least hold the quality bar if not even outshine the last decade since the producers should have learned by now that high-quality television is something viewers do appreciate.
« Last Edit: January 03, 2010, 07:40:22 PM by DJ Doena »
Karsten

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Najemikon

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Re: TV Shows - A Decade in Retrospect
« Reply #1 on: January 03, 2010, 02:10:24 AM »
Excellent, Karsten.  :thumbup:

I find it interesting though that it is a list almost all US. Thanks for mentioning Dr. Who and Being Human though, but all the more I wonder, don't you have homegrown stuff to rival that list?

Makes me appreciate the UK TV all the more. While we've sorely missed fun stuff like Who, Merlin and Life On Mars, we've always had a very high standard of drama otherwise that always applies that great line you said about character development. The BBC have cornered the market in period drama for decades if that's your thing, but otherwise our crime dramas are second to none, like Prime Suspect and Cracker. I found it interesting that The Wire could well be the equal if not better than those, but US productions like that have been noticeable by their absence while we've had them since the early 90s!

We also get a lot of dramas with "episodes" over two hours. Real engrossing stuff like Sharpe, Hornblower or Kenneth Branagh's recent take on a Swedish detective called Wallander. Only this week we've had a new version of Day of the Triffids shown over two nights, which I hope to catch up on this week. And of course, last year we had the superb Occupation, which I reviewed on here somewhere.

The one I would add to your list, even over The Sopranos and The Wire, would be Band of Brothers. I think that was important because it seemed to kick-start a flood of that sort of quality.

Still, all that said, I still hold Buffy The Vampire Slayer as the finest TV show ever produced. And the great joke is, everyone who hasn't seen it thinks we're taking the piss when we praise it so high! Whedon is a genius.

Rogmeister

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Re: TV Shows - A Decade in Retrospect
« Reply #2 on: January 03, 2010, 03:19:13 AM »
Surprisingly enough I've only caught a few of these shows.  I have only caught a few episodes of Two and a Half Men...it's a funny show but it's never drawn me in for some reason.  I do love both How I Met Your Mother and The Big Bang Theory and have watched both regularly since they began.  The problem with HIMYM is once they introduce the mother, that's basically the finale to the series.  I think they should probably do one more season, introduce the mother at the beginning of the season and we'll see her for one full season, culminating with the wedding.  Oh yes, I also saw Heroes...but I only watched the first season and then decided to stop so I guess I made a wise decision.  :thumbup:

Offline goodguy

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Re: TV Shows - A Decade in Retrospect
« Reply #3 on: January 03, 2010, 07:14:30 AM »
I'm sorry if I'm stating the obvious, but to me, the most notable thing about this decade is the rise and fall of HBO. There was a time around 2004/2005 when they had at least six(!) continuing drama series running: Six Feet Under, Carnivale, Deadwood, The Sopranos, The Wire, Oz. All of them were highly acclaimed - even if I didn't like The Sopranos and have yet to see the latter two. In 2007 was the last flash of brilliance with John From Cincinnati, then it was all over. Don't get me wrong, I really like True Blood, but it simply isn't in the same league. At its high point, HBO was redefining television as an art form, with an amazing output both in quality and quantity - and I really miss that.
Matthias

Offline DJ Doena

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Re: TV Shows - A Decade in Retrospect
« Reply #4 on: January 03, 2010, 10:56:52 AM »
but all the more I wonder, don't you have homegrown stuff to rival that list?

Unfortunately not. The public boradcasting system in Germany has an income of 7 billion euros(!) and they still manage to produce nothing of real qualitiy with it. The only thing that got praise in recent years was KDD - Kriminaldauerdienst, some sort of police crime show, but I never watched it.

In the private sector there's the long running, no-brainer police action show Cobra 11, then the german variant of The Office called Stromberg and then some comedy shows like Pastewka. But that's about it.

German television is abysmal if you ask me.
Karsten

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Offline Tom

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Re: TV Shows - A Decade in Retrospect
« Reply #5 on: January 03, 2010, 11:02:55 AM »
I find it interesting though that it is a list almost all US. Thanks for mentioning Dr. Who and Being Human though, but all the more I wonder, don't you have homegrown stuff to rival that list?

I don't watch much TV, so I do not see all German TV production. I had lost interest in watching German TV about ten years ago. There was almost never anything which interested me. The only German TV series I have watched and can recommend in the last ten years were:
"Mein Leben und ich" ("My Life and I") which was inspired by "My So-Called Life" but is done in an half-hour comedy format instead of an hour-drama format. It had six seasons.
"Stromberg" which is the German "The Office" remake. Currently there are four seasons
"Switch"/"Switch Reloaded": This parodies movies, celebrities, TV shows etc. Its origin is the Australian "Fast Forward". "Switch" had four seasons. It's sequel "Switch Reloaded" has currently four seasons I think.
« Last Edit: January 03, 2010, 11:04:43 AM by Tom »



Najemikon

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Re: TV Shows - A Decade in Retrospect
« Reply #6 on: January 03, 2010, 01:10:05 PM »
but all the more I wonder, don't you have homegrown stuff to rival that list?

Unfortunately not. The public boradcasting system in Germany has an income of 7 billion euros(!) and they still manage to produce nothing of real qualitiy with it. The only thing that got praise in recent years was KDD - Kriminaldauerdienst, some sort of police crime show, but I never watched it.

In the private sector there's the long running, no-brainer police action show Cobra 11, then the german variant of The Office called Stromberg and then some comedy shows like Pastewka. But that's about it.

German television is abysmal if you ask me.

So you have a publicly funded broadcaster that's paid for through a tax system, like us? Because it doesn't sound like you or Tom can find much for your money. Although ours is sort of by choice through a TV licence. It costs around £140 per year and to be honest, I don't mind it because the commercial channels show a lot of rubbish, yet are kept in check to some degree by having to keep up with the BBC. It's always a political hot potato though and I don't know how much longer the licence can survive in the face of all the subscription channels. I hope they keep it funded one way or another.

Offline Tom

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Re: TV Shows - A Decade in Retrospect
« Reply #7 on: January 03, 2010, 01:20:40 PM »
If you have a TV you have to pay a fee (about 210 euros a year) which pays for publicly funded channels. But these do not produce any TV shows that I had ever watched. All stuff I had watched were made by commercial TV stations. I wouldn't mind paying if it were like in your case, that the public stations produce the good stuff. But as it is, I feel like paying a lot of money for nothing.



Najemikon

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Re: TV Shows - A Decade in Retrospect
« Reply #8 on: January 03, 2010, 01:29:36 PM »
If you have a TV you have to pay a fee (about 210 euros a year) which pays for publicly funded channels. But these do not produce any TV shows that I had ever watched. All stuff I had watched were made by commercial TV stations.

I find that fascinating! There's always a lot of opposition to the licence fee and people arguing for its abolition, but still, Dr. Who's finale pulled in over 10million viewers the other night and everybody is talking about it. That regularly happens with our soaps too, which I've heard before, the equivalent programs, especially in the US, are terrible.

We have something called the BBC Trust, whose job it is to monitor the BBC and keep them in line, making sure the money is spent properly. It sounds like people rather take your fee for granted and no-one is questioning it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television_licensing_in_the_United_Kingdom

Offline Antares

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Re: TV Shows - A Decade in Retrospect
« Reply #9 on: January 03, 2010, 04:26:55 PM »
German television is abysmal if you ask me.


Really...what about...
(click to show/hide)

 ;)  :laugh:

Offline DJ Doena

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Re: TV Shows - A Decade in Retrospect
« Reply #10 on: January 03, 2010, 04:36:22 PM »
If you have a TV you have to pay a fee (about 210 euros a year) which pays for publicly funded channels. But these do not produce any TV shows that I had ever watched. All stuff I had watched were made by commercial TV stations.

I find that fascinating! There's always a lot of opposition to the licence fee and people arguing for its abolition, but still, Dr. Who's finale pulled in over 10million viewers the other night and everybody is talking about it. That regularly happens with our soaps too, which I've heard before, the equivalent programs, especially in the US, are terrible.

We have something called the BBC Trust, whose job it is to monitor the BBC and keep them in line, making sure the money is spent properly. It sounds like people rather take your fee for granted and no-one is questioning it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television_licensing_in_the_United_Kingdom

In the beginning the german public broadcasting system (PBS) was designed with the BBC as a template but unfortunately we don't have something like the BBC Trust. In the end all PBS stations are controlled by the two biggest political parties (CDU & SPD) and the local state goveneurs (who belong to one of the parties). Theoretically all kinds of social groups (both churches, feminists, ...) also have controlling seats but you rarely get a seat if you are not a member of one of the both parties. The second german television station was founded by the CDU chancellor Adenauer in the 1950s because he felt that the first station was under too much influence by the SPD.


According to the german equivalent of "Nielsen", the GfK, the average PBS viewer is 59-60 years old and the program looks exactly like that.

When I was staying at my granny's flat during christmas I had the bad luck to get another glimpse at german television and it gave me the shivers.

Private television stations where only allowed since 1984 IIRC.


@Antares: Who is that suppsed to be?  :headscratch:
« Last Edit: January 03, 2010, 04:39:41 PM by DJ Doena »
Karsten

Abraham Lincoln once said The trouble with quotes from the internet is that you never know if they're genuine.

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Offline Achim

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Re: TV Shows - A Decade in Retrospect
« Reply #11 on: January 03, 2010, 07:02:13 PM »
@Antares: Who is that suppsed to be?  :headscratch:
I have seen Sprockets a few times in 1991.  :laugh:

It is/was a sketch in Saturday Night Live, making fun of artsy Germans. If I remember correctly the host Dieter (on the right) was played my Mike Myers, of later Austin Powers fame.

Offline Tom

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Re: TV Shows - A Decade in Retrospect
« Reply #12 on: January 03, 2010, 07:15:47 PM »
My "SNL: Best of Mike Myers" has a few of those skits.
I wonder how it came about, that Germans are sometimes portayed like this in the US. See for example "The Big Lebowski" (if I remember correctly).



Offline DJ Doena

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Re: TV Shows - A Decade in Retrospect
« Reply #13 on: January 03, 2010, 07:17:15 PM »
I inserted a few cast pics in my first pic so if you don't know the series you can have a quick peak.
Karsten

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Offline goodguy

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Re: TV Shows - A Decade in Retrospect
« Reply #14 on: January 03, 2010, 07:51:36 PM »
The most notable and ambitious German TV series is the Heimat trilogy (1984-2004) by Edgar Reitz. It isn't a TV series in the conventional sense, though. The 20-year span doesn't mean 20 seasons, but 3 series (seasons really doesn't fit here) produced with a 10 year gap between each of them. Running time of the individual episodes varied between 1.5 and 2 hours. Ironically, the third series, although co-produced by the German PBS, was never completely shown on German public TV; you had to get the DVDs for that.

Heimat - Eine deutsche Chronik (11 episodes, 1984, AKA Homeland: A German Chronicle)
Die zweite Heimat - Chronik einer Jugend (13 episodes, 1993, AKA The Second Homeland: Chronicle of a Youth)
Heimat 3 - Chronik einer Zeitenwende (6 episodes, 2004, AKA Homeland III: Chronicle of a Changing Time)

The second series, covering the '60s in Germany, is one of the best TV series ever.
Matthias