The TV saga - a Styrian TV story
Movie | |
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Original title | The television saga |
Country of production | Germany |
original language | German |
Publishing year | 1995 |
length | (2 parts) 185 minutes |
Rod | |
Director | Julian Pölsler |
script | Julian Pölsler |
production | Dieter Pochlatko |
music | Hubert von Goisern |
camera | Fabian Eder |
cut | Marie Homolkova |
occupation | |
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The television saga - A Styrian Television Story is a German-Austrian two-part television film produced in 1995 .
The television saga shows the influence of television on the people in a Styrian village. Many original scenes from the ORF program of the 1950s and 1960s have been incorporated into the film. Julian Pölsler wrote the script , directed and accompanied the story as an autobiographical speaker.
content
Dr. Eisendle owns the first television set in the village. The grandmother of the little novel cooks for the doctor and so the boy experiences the first highlights of television at close range. And grandma's cooking skills also suffer from the magical attraction.
When the village doctor dies, the television set is even buried with him, but miraculously finds itself in the gravedigger's apartment. The pastor confiscates the device and sets it up in the hall of the inn - so he and the landlord have control over what the villagers are allowed to see; and most importantly, what not.
But then the television reports on the concentration camps in Auschwitz and Birkenau and some residents of the village are caught up in the past.
Awards
- Julian Pölser received the Erich Neuberg Prize for Die Fernsehsaga 1997