Fabian is a 1980 West German film directed by Wolf Gremm. It is based on the novel Fabian, the Story of a Moralist (1931) by German author Erich Kästner. The film was chosen as West Germany's official submission to the 53rd Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film receive a nomination.
While Larissa moves to a new house, she discovers hidden cameras everywhere in the flat. As she asks her previous tenant, she comes to know some nasty things about the daily routine of the all time horny callgirl, who made her hobby as her job... After she has been elucidated about the financial abilities, she decides to take the things with her own mouth...erm hands, and she wants to go the same way like her antecessor... Director from this movie: Hans Bilian. This is one of the first Hardcore-Motion Pictures, which were running across the cinemas in Germany.
During a high school trip, a hostel landlady stops the girls' teasing only to force herself on their teacher. A small stage play turns weird by backstage shenanigans. A vice cop tries stopping a lusty bogus priest on the beach.
About the film: Mr. Shimenger receives from his brother inherited the hotel. Then he flies to Germany, settling there as an ordinary guest, and finds out that his hotel has a reputation as a brothel ...
Bavarian sex comedy from Germany
About a village gone mad about a suspected treasure and about antagonistic neighbours and their decidely less antagonistic offspring.
Two young men want to get into an all-girls photo studio to see the scads of beautiful young nude women inside, so they decide to pose as women themselves.
A German businessmen is sent to Stockholm by his boss to secure an important contract, in the face of foreign competition. He discovers that the intended client has gone sailing round the Swedish islands and follows him. He becomes mixed up with a mysterious young woman named Maibritt, who eventually turns out to be the daughter of his intended client.
The story has an old donkey resolving to break away from the unbearable hardships of working for a fat miller (Alfred Pongratz). By and by, he recruits three more unsatisfied animals and convinces them to accompany him on his way to Bremen where they want to become musicians. Fighting off some robbers in a forest house then becomes an important part of the story.