Flückiger - 14 - Die Musik stirbt zuletzt

Numerous guests from the world of the beautiful, rich and famous flock to the Culture and Congress Center Lucerne. Limousines pull up, evening dresses shimmer in the headlights, cameras flash: the very wealthy businessman and patron of the arts, Walter Loving (Hans Hollmann), organizes a benefit concert with the Argentine "Jewish Chamber Orchestra" (Orchestra Jakobsplatz Munich). The victims of the Holocaust are to be commemorated with moving classical music by composers who perished in the concentration camps during World War II. Walter Loving himself helped numerous Jews to flee andthus saving her life. But is the patriarch really the do-gooder that everyone likes to see in him? It's not just his "failed" son Franky Loving (Andri Schenardi) who still has a score to settle with his father.
The famous Jewish pianist Miriam Goldstein (Teresa Harder) also plans to reveal a dark secret of the Loving family during the concert. An unknown blackmailer, in turn, wants to prevent this. And when the orchestra's clarinettist, Vincent Goldstein (Patrick Elias), is poisoned, Reto Flückiger (Stefan Gubser) and Liz Ritschard (Delia Mayer) enter the scene.
Trailer
Recently Updated Shows

The Savant
You've never heard of her, but somewhere in America, a top secret investigator known as the Savant is infiltrating online hate groups to take down the most violent men in the country.

Futurama
Futurama follows pizza guy Philip J. Fry, who reawakens in 31st century New New York after a cryonics lab accident. Now part of the Planet Express delivery crew, Fry travels to the farthest reaches of the universe with his robot buddy Bender and cyclopsian love interest Leela, discovering freaky mutants, intergalactic conspiracies and other strange stuff.

Mayor of Kingstown
Mayor of Kingstown is set in a small Michigan town where the only industry remaining are federal, state, and private prisons, the story follows the McLusky family, the power brokers between the police, criminals, inmates, prison guards and politicians, in a city completely dependent on prisons and the prisoners they contain. It is a stark and brutal look at the business of incarceration.