Yeah, that's the one. Have you seen QI before? It's fairly harmless and you end up with so much useless information you can win every pub quiz going...
Quote from: Jon on January 17, 2010, 07:03:09 PMYeah, that's the one. Have you seen QI before? It's fairly harmless and you end up with so much useless information you can win every pub quiz going... No, I hadn't. But they didn't say anything about nudity, you must have gotten that from somewhere else.
What the heck is going on, with all this Germany stuff? I'm just watching Paul Merton in Europe (like the China series Rich reviewed) and he's in East Germany with some unemployed German's that are slightly obsessed with the Wild West. Oh yeah. And more naked-ism! This time they're bowling. I think I'm going blind.
In East Germany this image was nourished because it were books about the good Indians against the evil white settlers (read: Americans).
waldmichlsholdi
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.
Quote from: goodguy on January 03, 2010, 07:51:36 PMThe 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.By the way, they are re-releasing all series soon in a complete boxset for the price of €85. It is a little expensive for me, but if the price drops, I will consider picking it up.