"Secret Traces" was the continuation of the television films "Secret Command Boomerang" (1966), "Secret Command Ciupaga" (1968) and "Secret Command Spree" (1968), which had already been successfully broadcast. In this new three-part series, the audience was able to follow an exciting story about a group of members of the National Committee "Free Germany" in the last days of World War II and the first months of the conflict's new beginning. In the last days of the war an SS fought in the streets of Berlin. Command embittered against the approaching Soviet tanks.
"Secret Traces" was the continuation of the television films "Secret Command Boomerang" (1966), "Secret Command Ciupaga" (1968) and "Secret Command Spree" (1968), which had already been successfully broadcast. In this new three-part series, the audience was able to follow an exciting story about a group of members of the National Committee "Free Germany" in the last days of World War II and the first months of the conflict's new beginning. In the last days of the war an SS fought in the streets of Berlin. Command embittered against the approaching Soviet tanks.
"Secret Traces" was the continuation of the television films "Secret Command Boomerang" (1966), "Secret Command Ciupaga" (1968) and "Secret Command Spree" (1968), which had already been successfully broadcast. In this new three-part series, the audience was able to follow an exciting story about a group of members of the National Committee "Free Germany" in the last days of World War II and the first months of the conflict's new beginning. In the last days of the war an SS fought in the streets of Berlin. Command embittered against the approaching Soviet tanks.
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.
The film “Trick 17 b” was the DFF's attempt to dramatize events from the everyday life of the German Bundeswehr using artistic means. The main reason for this was the fact that the ranger training in the United States was to be introduced in this army. The fact that this was accompanied by a process of brutalization and the number of crimes among members of the Bundeswehr, primarily among officers, should be addressed here. The film begins with a few scenes about a German Bundeswehr recruit named Klaus Menzel (Karl-Dieter Henker).
The young management team Uli Merkel receives an explosive order from the general management of his company: he is supposed to get back the lost technology designs of his predecessor Heiner Rudolf. The fact that this is an order to steal intellectual property does not initially bother Uli, after all he expects success from a variety of career opportunities and the implementation of his own ideas. However, things develop differently. After his designs and suggestions were rejected, Heiner retired to the island of Rügen.