Fanny Staffa

Henrik Agdestein ( Matthias Habich ) is considered a misanthropic veteran of Norwegian literature. When his wife dies after a long illness, he is devastated. The next day, his children are at the door to support him: the kind hearted teacher Sonja ( Catherine Bode ) with her family, the spirited policewoman Laura ( Fanny Staffa ), who was always Dad's darling, and the ambitious son Leif ( Rainer Sellien), Norway's Minister of Justice.

6.2/10

After a few years working like intern, Till, eventually becomes head of his own company, job counseling for young trainees. In turn, comes Sydelia, left-wing activist, idealist and combative. Their paths will soon cross youth. She is determined to start it the capitalist world in which we now live in a revolutionary way. But really, two people so different can be attracted?

5.1/10

Eberswalde, dying industrial city of forty thousand souls just 50 miles East Berlin. Johanna lives in that hopeless place. She lives refusing herself the dreams of following in the footsteps of her father, a boxer. Her irascible character makes her lose job after job and training in the gym where women are nothing but a nuisance. She perseveres supported by the love of a wonderful boy and the intelligence of a woman who knows that beautiful women are not necessarily stupid.

6.2/10

A hedonistic bachelor, falls for an escaped mental patient. Til Schweiger comes up with a slickly-made off-the-wall romantic comedy drama "Barfuss" (Barefoot), his first solo directing effort in nearly a decade. Punchy, anti-establishment tone, with Schweiger playing a hedonistic bachelor - he is his rich family's black sheep - who falls for a suicidal mental patient (Johanna Wokalek). An offbeat, strangely tender love story develops as Nick struggles with responsibility for the first time in his life.

7.2/10