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'Babylon Berlin' season 3: New murder mystery, same dark fascinations

The epic crime drama, described as continental Europe's most expensive show ever, aims to trace with large artistic ambition yet historical accuracy the origins of Nazism.

LOS ANGELES-BERLIN — Described as continental Europe's most expensive show ever, epic crime drama "Babylon Berlin" will show on Sky's streaming service on Jan. 24, now set in 1929, with a new murder mystery, based on "The Silent Death", the second novel in Volker Kutscher's trilogy, though with the same intent: To trace with large artistic ambition yet historical accuracy the origins of Nazism.

A world premiere on Dec. 16 hinted, with its creators' and cast comments, at what's new, and the series' growing relevance to the present day.

Produced again by Berlin-based X Filme Creative Pool, pan-European pay TV giant Sky, German public network ARD Degeto and Munich-based production-sales house Beta Film, season 3 follows police Inspector Gereon Rath (Volker Bruch) and flapper clerk Charlotte Ritter (Liv Lisa Fries) as they investigate a murder on a film set.

Image: Babylon Berlin
"Babylon Berlin" season 3.Beta Film

Sky is owned by NBC's parent company, Comcast.

The series diverges from its source material as co writer-show runners Tim Tykwer, Achim von Borries and Henk Handloegten slow down the pace of historical events using the crime-driven plot to explore the social and political unrest of a time that is frequently overlooked due to the dramatic dimension of what comes immediately after.

It's no easy feat to examine the past. At a press conference this week in Berlin, all three directors stressed their sense of the responsibility as the series has become a point of reference — yes, that is the scale of the show — for Germany's collective ideas about the Weimar Republic.

"It's sort of exciting for us," Tykwer commented."It's been a really popular show among young audiences in Germany. Many young people even see it in school."

When Twkwer was at school, the Weimar Republic was pretty well skipped. You had to get onto Hitler immediately: "So many people ask when seeing the series,:'How can I know so much [about what happened] after 1933 and so little about the five years before, [given] how important they were?'"

Capturing the era, "Babylon Berlin" plays with genre, turning on an even more mysterious crime, dramatizing and nuancing events in shades of grey while holding true to history.

Showrunners and cast alike pointed out at the press conference that one of the strengths of the series lies in its humanizing of characters. Pointedly, Von Borries remarked that the show scarcely has figures in National Socialist uniform: "If you have Nazis in uniforms, what can you say? Everything is said, already there. They are very bad people, have no inner life, they're like robots."

He went on: "But that's not how it is. The problem as story tellers is not to portray Nazis as Others."

Actor Fries agreed: The point of "Babylon Berlin" is not to show that Nazis are bad. The problem is Nazis often remain an abstract, like the extreme right or neo-Nazis in today's Germany. What happens, however, she asked, when the Nazis are "my cousin or my uncle? How do you handle that?"

As season 3 unfolds against the transition from cinema's silent era to the talkies, we get to see three prominent directors of Germany's current generation play with their own cinematic heritage as they enroll German Expressionism, giving nods back to films like Fassbinder's "Alexanderplatz" and Lang's "Mabuse," — an approach that can also be felt in Tom Tykwer and Johnny Klimek's score that carries a 1920s essence but with a very modern edge.

This revisiting of German cinema recalls Sigfried Kracauer's classic study, "From Caligari to Hitler," in which the exiled German author went as far to argue that the rise of fascism was embedded in a collective subconscious: Signs of it could be found in the cinema of the time. Whether his reading is correct or not, "Babylon Berlin" puts center stage in its broad wide historical panorama the same question in Kracauer's book: How can a liberal society fall to the forces of autocracy?

Some answers to that question were already given in seasons 1 and 2, as Rath, Ritter and Councillor August Benda, head of the Berlin Political Police, fight what seems an increasingly lone battle against supporters of the covert rearmament of a Germany humiliated and brought to its knees by a punitive Treaty of Versailles.

Shot back to back on a budget of above 40 million euros ($44.4 million, at current exchange rates), seasons 1 and 2 were sold by Beta Film to more than 100 territories. By April's MipTV trade fair in Cannes, season 3 had pre-sold to over 35 countries. Through April, "Babylon Berlin" had punched the best ratings ever for a non-English rating series on Sky.

As with the series' and current times develop, it's getting easier, moreover, to draw parallels between its time and ours: Both epochs of immense uncertainty as of technological and sociological breakthroughs, as the emancipation of women gathers pace, - an issue further developed by the series.

"Every time has its echo in the past," Henk said at the Berlin press conference. "I'm sure 'Babylon Berlin' wouldn't have been such a success in the 80s because it was a different time."

"We were looking forward, the Iron Curtain comes down, it seemed to start a century of prosperity, freedom and peace between nations. As we know, that didn't happen."

Nor did history turn out as Germans expected, at least in 1929. In season 3, episode 1, Charlotte and her sister rehearse dreams for the future, Charlotte still intent on becoming Germany's first female homicide detective. Audiences will watch with a glimmer of hope for her, but also with a sense of disquieted premonition.