Intrigue and Love, sometimes Love and Intrigue, Love and Politics or Luise Miller (German: Kabale und Liebe, literally "Cabal and Love") is a five-act play written by the German dramatist Friedrich Schiller (1759–1805). It was his third play. It shows how cabals and their intrigue destroy the love between Ferdinand von Walter, a nobleman's son, and Luise Miller, daughter of a middle-class musician. (Source: Wikipedia)
The Lark (French: L'Alouette) is a 1952 play about Joan of Arc by the French playwright Jean Anouilh. The play covers the trial, condemnation, and execution of Joan, but has a highly unusual ending. Joan remembers important events in her life as she is being questioned, and is subsequently condemned to death. However, Cauchon realizes, just as Joan is burning at the stake, that in her judges' hurry to condemn her, they have not allowed her to re-live the coronation of Charles VII of France. The fire is therefore extinguished, and Joan is given a reprieve.
The film portrays a case in which millions of euros of damage were caused by insufficient compliance with the fire protection regulations for welding work. It was not just Erbsand, the locksmith, who took the job of a welder and carried out welding work, although he had never acquired a certificate. Master Hobohm, who was otherwise known to be extremely conscientious, has to answer for himself in court because he not only trusted the pretended welder but also neglected his supervisory duties. (Source: Wikipedia)
Dombrowsky, the accountant of a medium-sized state-owned company, is at the center of the action. Driven by petty-bourgeois addiction and enrichment addiction, he uses shortcomings in the operational management and accounting system to take control of public property. For the same reasons, he conceals the actual operating result through incorrect reporting. He succeeds in including the young, inexperienced production manager Pause in the manipulation to cover up the planned arrears.
In extreme emergency, Bernd Roland and Toni Burian have to leave the moving train on the free route. Bernd Roland is injured when jumping. But he manages to stop a hospital car and give the order to take him and Burian to Berlin. Having arrived in the capital, Roland, Burian and the Soviet scout Boris (Gunter Schoß) do everything in their power to successfully complete their instructions. In concrete terms, this means finding out what plans the SS has for the last battles for Berlin.
Secret operations unit "Spree" was the sequel to the scout films “Secret operations unit Boomerang” (1966) and “Secret operations unit Ciupaga” (1967). In the spring of 1945 it was definitive: the final defeat of fascist Germany was inevitable, only a few weeks left, then the Hitler regime would be history.
Georg Brecher (Armin Mueller-Stahl), a 34-year-old journalist with ambitions as a writer, leads a young woman named Karin (Karin Ugowski) through the Pergamon Museum. Afterwards they both spend the night at Brecher, but split up again the day after. Brecher is a person who lives into the day and is in debt, but drives an American Chevrolet. When he tries to pump his father, a dentist, for money to pay debts to his housekeeper, who he affords, he refuses. Even Krümel, a friend in the editorial office of a newspaper for which he sometimes works, can only lend him 100 marks.