Genre: | Drama |
Creator: | Dorothee Schön |
Director: | Sönke Wortmann (Season 1) Anno Saul (Season 2) Christine Hartmann (Season 3) |
Starring: | Alicia von Rittberg Maximilian Meyer-Bretschneider Justus von Dohnányi Matthias Koeberlin Christoph Bach Ernst Stötzner (all above Season 1) Mala Emde Ulrich Noethen Jannik Schümann Luise Wolfram Artjom Gilz Jacob Matschenz (all above Season 2) |
Theme Music Composer: | Martin Lingnau Ingmar Süberkrüb (Season 1) John Gürtler Hannah von Hübbenet (Season 2) Fabian Römer Matthias Hillebrand-Gonzalez (Season 3) |
Country: | Germany |
Language: | German |
Num Series: | 4 |
Num Episodes: | 24 |
Executive Producer: | Benjamin Benedict Markus Brunnemann Nico Hofmann Sebastian Werninger |
Producer: | Henriette Lippold Michal Pokorný |
Editor: | Boris Gromatzki Julia Karg Dirk Grau |
Cinematography: | Holly Fink |
Runtime: | 45 minutes |
Company: | MIA Film UFA Fiction |
Channel: | Das Erste |
Charité is a German drama television series. The first season was directed by Sönke Wortmann, and was written by Grimme-Preis winner Dorothee Schön and Sabine Thor-Wiedemann. The season is set during 1888 and the years following at Berlin's Charité hospital. The series premiered on 21 March 2017 on the German channel Das Erste, and was distributed in the USA and UK on Netflix between April 2018 and June 2022.[1]
A second series went into production in November 2017, and first aired in Germany in February 2019. This season is directed by Anno Saul and was also written by Schön and Thor-Wiedemann. It is set in the years from 1943 to 1945. The cast was replaced with an entirely new set of actors because the many years elapsed in the storyline meant that all characters were different.[2] This second series began streaming on Netflix in North America in mid-2019 as Charité at War.[3]
Season 3 launched on ARD and Netflix Germany on 12 January 2021.[4] The season is set in 1961, the same year that construction began on the Berlin Wall.[5]
In 1888, between breakthroughs in medical research and enormous social upheavals, the Charité is well on its way to becoming the most famous hospital in the world. It is a city within the city, following its own laws and rules. At the beginning of the Wilhelmine Period, up to 4,000 patients are treated annually. Along with the expected injuries caused by the booming industrialization, patients suffer from infectious diseases such as tuberculosis, diphtheria, typhoid and cholera, as well as from sexually transmitted diseases. In addition, there are many medical students, taught at the Berlin University, who are being trained in this famous hospital by the future Nobel Prize winners and most prestigious doctors of the time: Rudolf Virchow, the founder of the modern health care systems, Robert Koch, the discoverer of the tuberculosis bacillus, Emil von Behring, whose work contributed greatly to the healing of diphtheria, and Paul Ehrlich, who developed the first drug against syphilis.
In 1943, more and more patients are admitted into the Berlin Charité due to World War II. The hospital is still considered a focal point for medicine, but the staff is divided since some members do not support the regime while others are staunch followers of the government. One of the best known doctors at the Charité is Ferdinand Sauerbruch, a surgeon practicing there since 1928. He became world-famous in the 1930s by developing innovative surgical techniques which greatly decreased the risks of operations at the time. He was also responsible for inventing new types of prostheses which improved the mobility of a patient's remaining muscle. He seems to become more and more critical of the Nazi regime as World War II progresses, which makes him clash with several of his colleagues. One of them is Max de Crinis, a psychiatrist. He is a high-ranking member of the SS who greatly supports the government. Unlike Sauerbruch, De Crinis is also an avid proponent of the country's euthanasia programmes, some of which are carried out at the Charité.