Nicotine – A Drug with a Future

Nicotine – A Drug with a Future

Nicotine - A Drug with a Future

A film by Bärbel Merseburger-Sill, 90 min., ZDF/Arte 2020

The number of smokers in Europe is declining, yet the tobacco industry is still making considerable profits. Electronic innovations such as e-cigarettes and tobacco heaters play a significant role in this. Both are said to be far less harmful than conventional cigarettes. But is the aromatic steam really not a danger to our health?

Officially, the tobacco industry is committed to a ‘smoke-free world’: Non-smokers should not start at all, smokers should switch to an electronic device. But isn’t this too good to be true? Aren’t the advertising campaigns aimed specifically at young non-smokers, the consumers of tomorrow?

And what about the influence of the industry through lobbying? To what extent are the health hazards of the dangerous drug nicotine concealed? Despite numerous lawsuits against the tobacco industry and counter campaigns by politicians and NGOs, tobacco and the new e-products remain good business.

48 Hours – The Järvi Family

48 Hours – The Järvi Family

48 Hours – The Järvi Family

A film by Isabel Hahn and Holger Preuße, 43 min. WDR/arte 2019

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They are three star conductors and come from one family: Paavo, Kristjan and Neeme Järvi. Since 2011 they have been meeting every summer in the small Estonian port town of Pärnu on the Gulf of Riga to give concerts and hold workshops.

This year, the piece “Korale for 80” by Kristjan Järvi is one of the highlights of the Pärnu Music Festival. He composed it for his father Neeme’s 80th birthday. It will be conducted by Kristjan’s brother Paavo Järvi.

The festival in Pärnu also features world-famous artists. This year the exceptional Norwegian cellist Truls Mørk is among them.

Corona Diaries

Corona Diaries

Corona Diaries

A film by Elke Sasse a.o., 43 / 60 / 73 min, Arte/RBB/DW 2020

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What do people do when nothing works anymore? What do we do with our fears, uncertainties, boredom and the dissatisfaction during lockdown? The “Corona Diaries” by filmmaker Elke Sasse are a global video diary about life with the pandemic. People from different countries document their lives with their cell phone camera: The nurse at the corona ICU in Spain, the virus researcher in France, the lecturer in China, the construction worker in India, the bicycle courier from New York and many others.

“Corona Diaries” is a touching piece of contemporary history that connects us to people around the world in these difficult times – in our fears of becoming infected, losing our jobs and our existence. But at the same time, we experience a new way of working together, with solidarity and ingenuity.

Length:                               60 minutes
Director:                             Elke Sasse et. al.
Produced by:                     Berlin Producers Media, commissioned by RBB, in cooperation with DW Deutsche Welle and ARTE
Editors-in-Chief:               Dagmar Mielke (RBB/ARTE), Ute Beutler (RBB), Hanne Kehrwald, Frauke Sandig (DW)

 

Corona Diaries Online

“Corona Diaries” is a crossmedia project consisting of online content produced exclusively for ARTE and DW’s online pages and social media as well as the 60-minute film broadcast this week. The social videos made for the project can be found here:

ARTE’s media player (in German)
DW Documentary’s YouTube channel (in English)
DW Documentary’s Instagram (in English)
DW Documental (in Spanish)
DW Documentary Arabic (in Arabic)

Beethoven’s Ninth: Symphony for the World

Beethoven’s Ninth: Symphony for the World

Beethoven's Ninth: Symphony for the World

A film by Christian Berger, 90 min, Deutsche Welle, ZDF/arte

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On the occasion of Ludwig van Beethoven’s 250th birthday (1770–1827), French-German broadcaster ARTE will be showing a 90-minute TV documentary about Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony on February 2, 2020.

No other work in symphonic literature has undergone such wide and enthusiastic reception. To this day, the most-played work of all time moves people all over the world.

The premiere on May 7, 1824 was a huge success. To the surprise of the audience, Beethoven had used a choir, a groundbreaking innovation never seen before at symphony concerts. With the chorus of Friedrich Schiller’s “Ode to Joy”, the Ninth Symphony carries the connecting power of people, of joy and freedom. It is music for eternity. Without hearing, Beethoven created a masterpiece that has not only come to be used as the official anthem of the European Union and listed in the world documentary heritage of the UNESCO, but which is also used in numerous feature films and pop hits.

The film follows the traces of the Ninth on four continents and looks at current interpretations. Filmmaker Christian Berger meets people whose lives are closely linked to Beethoven’s Ninth. “We were shooting in eight countries on four continents. Our protagonists spoke ten different languages, yet Beethoven was always sung in German. That was a big challenge,” says the director.

The protagonists of the seven film stories include (among others) Chinese composer and Oscar winner Tan Dun, British composer Gabriel Prokofiev, Greek star conductor Teodor Currentzis and Paul Whittaker (OBE) and his work with hearing-impaired children with the Mahler Chamber Orchestra (MCO).

Beethoven’s Ninth wins the “Deutscher Kamerapreis” in the category Montage (Documentary) as well as the Award for Best Documentary at the 2020 International Christian Film and Music Festival

48 Hours – De Falla at the Alhambra

48 Hours – De Falla at the Alhambra

48 Hours – De Falla at the Alhambra

A film by Claus Wischmann, 43 min. WDR/arte

A Spanish masterpiece, performed in the setting of the Alhambra and conducted by a musician who grew up in Granada: Pablo Heras-Casado and the Mahler Chamber Orchestra interpret De Falla’s “Three-Cornered Hat” one hundred years after its debut performance.
A perfect evening against a perfect backdrop – if it weren’t for the weather.

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