Fredrik von Krusenstjerna
1958 (65 лет)Förräderi
Fredrik von Krusenstjerna
Rikard Wolff, Sascha Anderson
Journalist Björn Cederberg travels to Berlin, Jena, Weimar and Rome to meet his old friend, the cultural worker Sascha Anderson. He got to know Anderson in 1983 in the GDR, where he was a central figure among opposition writers and artists in East Berlin's Prenzlauer Berg. Cederberg has a hard time believing that it is true that the media reports, namely that for 20 years Anderson has been an informant to Stasi, the East German authority that spied on its own citizens.
Betrayal
Tranceformer: A Portrait of Lars von Trier
Stig Björkman
Lars von Trier, Jean-Marc Barr
A portrait of Denmark's most acclaimed and controversial director, Lars von Trier. A meeting with von Trier on a private level as well as with his film universe. Filmmaker Stig Björkman follow von Trier during a period of more than two years, meet him at work, at home and at leisure. Written by Fredrik Klasson
Tranceformer: A Portrait of Lars von Trier
Tong Tana - En resa till Borneos inre
Fredrik von Krusenstjerna, Kristian Petri
A Swedish crew trekked into the depths of the endangered Bornean rainforest to film this poetic documentary about the plight of the Penans and their most unusual ally, Bruno Manser - a young Swiss who has rejected 'civilization' to join the tribe and help fight international logging.
Tong Tana - En resa till Borneos inre
Necrobusiness
Fredrik von Krusenstjerna, Richard Solarz
Monika Sieradzka, Witold Skrzydlewski
The Polish government issued a burial fund to the relatives of any deceased citizen. Now the undertakers of Lodz in Poland have figured out a way to lay their greedy hands on those funds. By paying ambulance drivers to get the information where the unfortunate relatives live, they went there with contracts to get the relatives to sign over the burial funds to the undertakers. The idea was that while the relatives was still struck with grief and sorrow, they wouldn't want to read through a thick contract and just sign it instead. Things really went ugly when the ambulance drivers figured out that they would make more money if more people died.
Necrobusiness