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Abandonnés par Moscou et désespérément à la recherche d'argent, les dirigeants est-allemands poussent leurs agents secrets à expérimenter le capitalisme et à sauver leur navire socialiste en... Tout lireAbandonnés par Moscou et désespérément à la recherche d'argent, les dirigeants est-allemands poussent leurs agents secrets à expérimenter le capitalisme et à sauver leur navire socialiste en perdition.Abandonnés par Moscou et désespérément à la recherche d'argent, les dirigeants est-allemands poussent leurs agents secrets à expérimenter le capitalisme et à sauver leur navire socialiste en perdition.
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- 1 victoire et 3 nominations au total
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After watching the first season - Deutschland 83 - I was excited to see the second season available on Netflix. Compared to Deutschland 83, this season was a slight disappointment; watchable but not as binge worthy as Deutschland 83.
For those expecting more of the same Deutschland 86 will come as a surprise. Deutschland 86 moved away from its core East Germany vs West Germany Cold War premise and shifted to the Cold War battleground of South Africa.
The episodes didn't flow seamlessly, i.e. the stories seemed jumpy and often only loosely connected. While there was continuity with main characters, e.g. Martin Rauch, Lenora Rauch, et. al. many new persons were introduced and made the story more complicated to follow.
In a nutshell, the plot goes as follows. The Soviet Union is near bankruptcy. Gorbachev is implementing reforms which include cutting financial aid to Warsaw Pact countries like East Germany. In the new environment, East Germany's government is forced to scramble for hard currencies like the Deutsche Marks (remember the West German currency?!) by going 'capitalist.'
Many schemes, legal and illegal but all surreptitious, are concocted by East German leaders. East German blood is sold across the border. East German citizens are used for (often unethical) medical trials by Western pharmaceutical companies.
However, for Deutschland 86 the focus is on smuggling weapons. Not just routine arms smuggling but violating a UN arms embargo against South Africa's white supremacist Apartheid regime (remember black people were legally subhuman until the late 1980s in South Africa?!).
Yes, communist East Germany was selling weapons to 'Free / Capitalist South Africa' so it could suppress Mandela's communist African National Congress (ANC) armed insurgency ... to generate money to keep the Socialist dream alive! Ironic but true. Much of Deutschland 86 revolves around the adventures related to selling arms to South Africa and the shenanigans required to circumvent UN sanctions and hoodwink ordinary communist East Germans.
Deutschland 86 is eminently watchable. Not as tightly knit as the first season of Deutschland. Nonetheless, it reveals important insights into the demise of the East Bloc's communist regimes while still entertaining viewers. For social scientists, Deutschland 86 underscores the importance of pragmatism over ideology.
NB: At the time of writing Deutschland 86 is available on Netflix in multiple jurisdictions.
For those expecting more of the same Deutschland 86 will come as a surprise. Deutschland 86 moved away from its core East Germany vs West Germany Cold War premise and shifted to the Cold War battleground of South Africa.
The episodes didn't flow seamlessly, i.e. the stories seemed jumpy and often only loosely connected. While there was continuity with main characters, e.g. Martin Rauch, Lenora Rauch, et. al. many new persons were introduced and made the story more complicated to follow.
In a nutshell, the plot goes as follows. The Soviet Union is near bankruptcy. Gorbachev is implementing reforms which include cutting financial aid to Warsaw Pact countries like East Germany. In the new environment, East Germany's government is forced to scramble for hard currencies like the Deutsche Marks (remember the West German currency?!) by going 'capitalist.'
Many schemes, legal and illegal but all surreptitious, are concocted by East German leaders. East German blood is sold across the border. East German citizens are used for (often unethical) medical trials by Western pharmaceutical companies.
However, for Deutschland 86 the focus is on smuggling weapons. Not just routine arms smuggling but violating a UN arms embargo against South Africa's white supremacist Apartheid regime (remember black people were legally subhuman until the late 1980s in South Africa?!).
Yes, communist East Germany was selling weapons to 'Free / Capitalist South Africa' so it could suppress Mandela's communist African National Congress (ANC) armed insurgency ... to generate money to keep the Socialist dream alive! Ironic but true. Much of Deutschland 86 revolves around the adventures related to selling arms to South Africa and the shenanigans required to circumvent UN sanctions and hoodwink ordinary communist East Germans.
Deutschland 86 is eminently watchable. Not as tightly knit as the first season of Deutschland. Nonetheless, it reveals important insights into the demise of the East Bloc's communist regimes while still entertaining viewers. For social scientists, Deutschland 86 underscores the importance of pragmatism over ideology.
NB: At the time of writing Deutschland 86 is available on Netflix in multiple jurisdictions.
Compared to the first season, it's actually a little disappointing at first - in particular the first few episodes, but it does get better about halfway through and finds its feet well enough....and becomes the familiar show we all know and love.
The Berlin stuff is all good, I found the African parts quite poorly handled and just not very interesting or compelling.
The Berlin stuff is all good, I found the African parts quite poorly handled and just not very interesting or compelling.
The plot was very interesting with lots of twists, good balance of continuity and variation. No one's "good" or "bad", the characters have so much depth. The setting's awesome, really makes you travel in time. A meaningful and adventure-packed talk about history, adventures, feelings and human nature.
Watched season one and was intrigued-season two different vibe but equally good! Hope there is more to come
Deutschland 83 was nostalgic and compelling television but ended perhaps a little too abruptly. Fast forward three years and I've been waiting for Channel 4 to upload episode 11 of Deutschland 86 because for the past two or three weeks I've been convinced I'm in the midst of the series. Then, sadly, the penny dropped. Episode 10 *was* the last episode and there will be no further development of this gripping instalment. Needless to say, I've thoroughly enjoyed. It gets better and better as it goes along and manages to outclass its very classy predecessor. There's been very little talk about it in the media and I don't understand why because for my money it's one of the best things on TV. Give me this over Game of Thrones any day. The reviewer who couldn't get past episode 2 should have tried because the first two episodes are probably the worst. In many senses it's children's television for adults. It's comic book simple but it's poignant and smart and I really like the lens - metaphorically speaking- that the program maker's use to gaze at the 80s. Of course, a somewhat stylized 80s that makes it look much tidier than it was and naturally can't help but be looking at now but all the same authentic enough to give you some idea. A must watch for lovers of alternative TV but may also appeal to those who like Bourne Supremacy and James Bond.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesParallel to the series start of Deutschland 86, the documentary Comrades & Cash: Geheime Geschäfte unter dem Eisernen Vorhang (2018) highlights the historical background of the series.
- ConnexionsFollowed by Deutschland 89 (2020)
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- How many seasons does Deutschland 86 have?Alimenté par Alexa
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