Katrin Seybold Film GmbH Movie Trailers

Most Popular Katrin Seybold Film GmbH Trailers

Total trailers found: 10

Nein! Zeugen des Widerstandes in München 1933-1945 Trailer (1998)

15 October 1998

Documentary film.

Die wilden Tiere Trailer (1969)

09 October 1969

Documents a one-week meeting of radical leftist activists known as "Knastkamp" (Prison battle), which took place in July 1969 in Ebrach, Bamberg.

Ludwig Koch - Der mutige Weg eines politischen Menschen Trailer (2000)

31 March 2000

Documentary film.

Wir sind Sintikinder und keine Zigeuner Trailer (1981)

03 May 1981

The nine-year-old Sinti girl Brigitta shows us her world. She lives with her family in a caravan site on the outskirts of a small Bavarian town.

King Kongs Faust Trailer (1985)

26 April 1985

Berlin Film Fest 1984. The best place for every cinema fan. Everyone wants to be in on the festival, but that may be really difficult, if one has no accreditation.

The Lie Trailer (1987)

11 June 1987

The child of survivors of the Sinti persecution by Nazis, Melanie Spitta confronts the truth about unpaid reparations as she exposes shocking evidence and issues a warning against believing perpetrators over victims.

Die Widerständigen "also machen wir das weiter" Trailer (2015)

08 February 2015

‘The films I make have to get made, because when these people are dead they’re dead and all we’ll have left are Gestapo records, the records of the perpetrators.

Die Widerständigen - Zeugen der Weißen Rose Trailer (2008)

22 June 2008

This is the first comprehensive documentary portrayal of the White Rose, the movement led by Munich students and their spirit of resistance to the Nazi regime.

Mut ohne Befehl - Widerstand und Verfolgung in Stuttgart 1933-1945 Trailer (1994)

01 November 1994

Documentary film.

Es ging Tag und Nacht, liebes Kind. Trailer (1982)

10 June 1982

In the documentary, Melanie Spitta accompanies survivors and their children to Auschwitz. The film powerfully illustrates how the horrors of the concentration camps have shaped the survivors and their descendants across decades and generations—and why the victims’ trust in the Gadjé remains broken to this day.