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- Samuel Curtis, an interplanetary trader, sets forth through a rustic and remote solar system, unaware that his old friend Professor Hess is trying to kill him.
- Harsh realism and pure magic go hand in hand in this moving story about love, abandonment and alcohol. 7-year old Ida, a brave little girl, has to take care of her kid brother Skrubsak, feed the family and keep the child welfare officers at stake. Ida's father has left the family for another woman, and so far Mum has found consolation in the bottle.
- Svend Aage is an aging prisoner. His son, Max, is doing well in the world "outside" - or so Svend Aage's wife tells him - and is quite unaware that his father is in jail. One day, a new inmate arrives at the gates to serve the most severe sentence ever handed out for violence and drug-related crime. It's Max.
- Based on the epic, written on twelve 5000 year old clay tablets, this is the first film adaptation of Gilgamesh.
- Classic children's show starring Bamse and his friends Kylling and Ælling. In each episodes Bamse's picture book (Bamses billedbog) serves as the source for an interstellar story.
- Danish version of the desert island-based reality TV series.
- Two hosts (Sonny & Sonny) present various segments, including the adventure/romantic series "Tannhäuser" (a spoof on Star Wars featuring the mechanic Reinhardt and his son Kurt struggling against the evil Tannhaüser Corporation), music videos, studio guests, and the animated "Godnathistorier" narrated by Thomas Winding.
- Comedy stage show portraying the legendary Danish multi-millionaire Simon Spies who lived quite an unusual life in the 70's and 80's, filled with sex, ladies, booze, drugs, business, and airplanes. A man who constantly played around with the medias.
- Two 15-year old cousins, Iben and Sanne, are invited to spend their summer holiday with their aunt, the owner of a dilapidated spa in Eastern Europe. The aunt is an eccentric woman whose life is sustained by memories of a time long past; Iben and Sanne are eager and hungry for life. Soon after their arrival, they discover Felix, a young man who has pitched his tent in the aunt's large, overgrown park. All three women are drawn to Felix. Yet, while the aunt continues in her reveries and Sanne begins to play with the idea of a romance, Iben casts herself into a secretive, new world of longing and intimacy, love and separation.
- Families are given the opportunity to get rid of all their junk, and in return they receive money to be spend of hiring designers and constructers who will improve on their house. The families receive 50 Danish kroners (approx. 8 US dollars) for each kilo of junk they can find in the house. And walls (teared down just for the occasion) count as junk, too. Weight is the keyword.
- Tonny and Tonny (two extremely enthusiastic hosts wearing toupés) present recurring segments, including the neo-noir comedy drama "Klap-I-Olsen" featuring the adventures of a very drunk but highly philosophical detective at his local bar, the romantic (mis)adventures of "Henriette Hermansen", the segment "De fire Jørgen Cleviner" (a sort of children's show for adults) featuring the legendary TV-host Jørgen Clevin, and the reality show "Rambuk-TV" (a futuristic/satirical vision of what reality-TV might become.
- Marika meets Mads and their two hearts beat as one, but Marika is still oddly stand-offish. She is planning a trip abroad with her friend Helle, but restless Helle's increasing drug habit gradually makes the plans fall apart. But Marika bears a terrible secret. She's got to get away. Away from Helle's father.
- The Danish version of the hit reality TV show. A group of contestants from a variety of backgrounds are locked in the same house, where they must try to get along well enough to keep from killing each other. The house has been wired with cameras in every room so that we at home can watch them on TV. Each week, the contestants vote to evict one of their number, until only one remains to claim the grand prize.
- This children's miniseries tells the story of Bamse's fairy tale like adventure on a small remote planet inhabited by the wonderful and strange characters Forlæns and Baglæns. This series was the creation of Finn Bentzen, Elith Nulle Nykjær and Poul Nesgaard (now headmaster of The National Film School of Denmark) and is by many considered to be one of the best television programmes for children ever made in Denmark. After this mini series Bamse got his own weekly tv-series entitled "Bamses billedbog" (1983) set in a completely different enviroment.
- Cafe Hector is the new in-place for the chic, high-flying, articulate jet-set, where steaming cups of cappuccino accompany their trendy chit-chat. Uffe is definitely not "in". He can't get a cappuccino, but he is given permission, just this once, to use the toilet. But Uffe is prepared for the situation. He can't take any more humiliation and he is armed!
- John Cleese shows that, properly planned and organised, a meeting can achieve more in a short time than any other method of internal communication. Makes everyone who attends meetings aware of the damage that can bedone by approaching a meeting without preparation. Demontrates techniques and disciplines which can make meetings shorter and more productive.
- This television children's series marked the debut of a big yellow teddy bear called Bamse who later got his own series "Bamses billedbog" (1983). It is also here we first encounter Bamse's friends Kylling, Aske and Pernille. Søren Hauch-Fausbøll who wears the Bamse costume continues to portray the popular character throughout the following twelve years.
- Portrait of two sisters. Through archive footage and photos we follow Dora and Frida during almost a century. They tell about their school, work, modesty, sex, marriages, and their lives as pensioners. Frida has lived in the same apartment on Nørrebro in Copenhagen for 64 years. As often as she can she visits her younger sister who lives near Køge.
- 500 people are killed each year in Danish traffic. But 500 families are also struck by the tragedies and their life will never become the same again. But behind these numbers are also other consequences. Charlotte Gretoft tells a horrible story about a traffic accident in 2001. Charlotte lost both her daughter and husband in a split second. How a life suddenly change when you lose your nearest and most loved ones. The family drove 130 kilometers pr. hour.
- A sequel to the film Meetings, Bloody Meetings (1976). A manager who has learnt all the practical lessons from his experiences in the first film dreams how he habitually breaks the three laws of meetings. This film gives invaluable insights into the way people behave at meetings, and how skilful hands can extract the right decisions.
- Henrik and Jacob have just finished high school, but they can't get into university, so Jacob gets a job as a waiter and Henrik helps his uncle clear out a rich man's villa after the owner went bankrupt and committed siucide. During the clearance Henrik finds a book that gives minute details of perfect crimes. Henrik tries the first description - and everything goes according to plan. But what about the second? Or the third?
- Four men are accidentally trapped in a sauna. After a couple of hours the temperature begins to drop, and a cold night awaits them. They all dislike each other, and when the situations seems hopeless, one of the four men, an old man in his late 60s, drops a bomb, revealing past nightmares. Introduction by Nikolaj Cederholm.
- Critical portrait of TVIND and its founder and undisputed leader, Mogens Amdi Petersen. How a man and his system for years have misused the Danish treasury, naive Danes and also the organisation's own members. All of it for one single purpose, to canalize billions of Danish kroners to Mogens Amdi Petersen.
- The story of Richard Lewis--a harrassed overworked and over stressed area manager for a contract catering company. Richard is a well meaning man, but always cames off badly in his dealings with the boss, his Team of managers and his secretary because he hasn't learnt the two essential lessons of being a manager--how to organise himself and how to organise the others.
- A stranger comes to town. The enigmatic protagonist, Seth, gets off the bus one hot summer day at the end of August and takes rooms at the local inn. This sets off a long chain of reactions in the town. Reactions that have dramatic and fatal consequences for everyone involved.
- Sinan is a second generation Turkish immigrant. He is young, restless and he likes the ladies. His parents have found him a bride, the beautiful Gül. They have also planned for him to take over his father's restaurant after the wedding. But Sinan has other fish to fry.
- Henrik is young and in love and moves with his girlfriend Anne into a commune in the countryside. It is the dawn of the 70's, a time to challenge authority and experiment with relationships. Henrik is challenged too: His role as a man is exhibited and discussed, he has to learn how to sew, to sleep in the group bedroom, to share his inheritance with the commune and his beloved Anne with a lesbian.
- In each episode two women switch family for 10 days. At the arrival of their new home a manual containing daily rutines is waiting. The documentary series explores what happens when rutines and house rules are turned upside down. Will the women adapt new ways of living and bring that back to their own home?
- Late night sketch comedy talk-show featuring bizarre and surreal characters played out by the three Angora comedians: Simon Kvamm, Rune Tolsgaard and Esben Pretzmann. Broadcast three times weekly on Mon/Tue/Wed, with a "best-of-the-week" edition on Friday.
- Fathers-to-be will tread cautiously after seeing Peter Gren Larsen's film, which respectlessly crosses "Get fit after giving birth" with "The Chainsaw Massacre". Babies are admired and experiences shared in the mothers' group, but something isn't right. Camilla's husband is lying in bed with a huge hole in his head. Camilla and her frying pan put an end to his life, but how can she escape prison so she can bring up baby herself? The mothers go into action and they do it with a vengeance in this paraphrase of "The Perfect Murder".
- A film about attitudes and self-insight. The protagonist, Mads, was a front figure in the band "Madssacre" in the 80's. In the 90's, he's an anachronistic wreck. Booking manager Lone's attempts to recreate the band is doomed to failure. Repeating the past can't solve the problems of the present. At the end of the film, both Mads and Lone have reached a point where they can start liberating themselves from their attitudes.
- Life is not easy when you are a Danish kid called Aksel who loves meatballs. Especially when you would much rather want to be one of the cool Muslim boys who wear those golden necklaces and say cool stuff in Arabic. To worsen things, during the holidays Aksel gets teamed up with two girls, Fatima and Annika, to perform a song to the local youth club's song contest, Melodi Grand Prix. The girls want to do a girly pop song, and the entire jury panel consist of Muslim boys! Meanwhile the kids find a stray dog who needs a home. This leads to nothing but trouble, and one of the girls, Fatima, is grounded by her parents for the entire holiday season. Now she can't perform the song, and Aksel realizes he must take action! He enters an unknown world of rituals and cultural perceptions, and fixes everything in his own unique way.
- Love has a price in this quirky sex comedy. Sten is a 30- year-old librarian. Over a book he meets supersexy Katja, the woman of his dreams, and they soon end up in bed together. It's love at first sight, but the next thing he knows, Katja wants money every time they make love. Otherwise their relationship will become trivial, she says. Reluctantly Sten agrees, but then Katja puts up the price.
- The Expedition Sirius 2000 took place from February to June 2000 and was the most ambitious arctic expedition for many years, and is the first Greenland expedition in the new millennium. Six men, including the Danish Crown Prince, took up the challenge against the freak conditions of Greenland's nature.
- Controversal documentary focusing on events in Afghanistan in 2002 in which Danish soldiers handed over prisoners to the US Army even though USA no longer treated prisoners of war according to the Geneva Convention. Further, the film questions the Danish Prime Minister's reasons for getting Denmark involved in the so-called War Against Terrorism in Afghanistan in the first place.
- What do change and the future have in common? How does your organization accept change. The truth is, leading companies accept change more readily, and actually make it work for them. That's what makes the two parts of our All Change program so compelling. First, we travel into the future with John Cleese as H.G. Wells. In Part 1: Change For The Better, Wells shows the dire consequences for businesses that don't move ahead with the times. Next, we learn how to avoid those pitfalls in Part 2: The Shape Of Things To Come. It's a look at the necessary resources we need to ensure communication, training, and support for the future.
- Having destroyed multiple cages and fences in both Aalborg Zoo and Givskud Zoo the white rhino Brutalis is sentenced a one-way ticket back to Africa. DR-Derude tells the story of Brutalis, from his 'childhood' in England to his return to nature.
- Documentary about Danish communists who were put in the Stutthof Concentration Camp during the German occupation of Denmark in WWII. The widows to these men, nicknamed "The Red Widows" formed the "Stutthof Committee" and helped Red Cross bring food and supplies to the prisoners. Thanks to the Committee thousands survived Stutthof.
- Documentary about why the 21-year old Danish girl Isabelle died in a hospital in India. On February 21, 2001 she is found lying on a highway in India, and is brought to the hospital in Mumbai. Five days later she dies alone. Since then, Isabelle's sister has tried to uncover the facts of what happened, and why the Ministry of Danish Foreign Affairs didn't take more action.
- Intimate portrait of Mogens Lykketoft running for Prime Minister during the weeks up to the Danish Referendum 2005. The documentary deals in particular with his confrontations with the media and his relationship to his spin doctors.
- TV Avisen is a Danish news programme broadcast each day and is part of the television channel DR1
- Author Henry Lincoln explains the original background to the 'Holy Bloodline' hypothesis, later featured in Dan Brown's bestselling novel "The Da Vinci Code".
- A portrait of two generations. The newly engaged young couple Hans and Merete live side by side Hans' parents on the farm Havklev, located near Åbenrå in Denmark. It sure wasn't Merete's dream to live on the countryside. Neither, she finds out, was that Hans' mothers dream. That all seems to be part of the package of love when you marry a farmer from Havklev.
- Documentary disclosing how a group of Danish pedophiles operate when they're trying to lure children to have sex with them. Journalist Jacob Billing goes undercover for 11 months as 'a pedophile' under the name of 'Jacob Andersen', using this controversial method to portray a brutal pedophile environment.
- A working class family with strong opinions on the social experiment Christiania, a free Commune in Copenhagen, goes to live there for a couple of weeks, an experience that completely transforms both the attitudes of the family and those inside the commune.
- All-day live charity concert from Idrætsparken in Copenhagen, the biggest ever in Denmark, with performances by 28 Danish bands and artists, performing for 28,000 people. A Danish followup to Bob Geldorf's Live Aid concert, earlier this year, raising money for famine relief in Africa.
- Palle Strøm presents memorable and often rare footage from the archives of Danmarks Radio, trailers from horror and science fiction b-movies from the 1950s and 1960s, obscure educational films from the US Army (never before broadcasted in Denmark), and others bits. In each episode a former television host (often one who worked at Danmarks Radio's youth or entertainment departments in the 1970s and 1980s) joins Palle Strøm to comment on the clips.
- Elisabeth is a 70-year-old woman who has injured her leg. Karima is a young girl of immigrant parents who is hired to help Elisabeth. Their backgrounds are very different, and their relationship is characterized by skepticism and suspicion until they find each other in music, their mutual passion. When Karima must suddenly get married, it appears that their lives are perhaps not all that different.
- Hans Otto Bisgaard visits the infamous Dalton brothers - Lars Lilholt, Johnny Madsen and Allan Olsen. During a break in their Denmark tour we meet them at their hideout place. As they discuss their adventures other 'outlaws' drop in and join the chat, among them Niels Hausgaard, the boxer Gert Bo Jacobsen, and Viggo Sommer from 'De Nattergale'.
- Outlines how and how not to conduct interviews. Shows where and how the three principal faults occur -failing to prepare for the interview, failing to draw the candidate out and get him talking freely and relevantly, and failing to come out with the direct, probing questions. John Cleese plays the three managerial types who exemplify these faults, Ethelred the Unready, Ivan the Terrible and William the Silent. Norman Bowler shows the proper interview techniques.