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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/thecherryqueen.jpg]]
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3''The Cherry Queen'' (German: ''Die Kirschenkönigin'') is a 2004 German {{historical|Fiction}} drama {{miniseries}} directed by Rainer Kaufmann and written by Justus Pfaue. It adapts [[SelfAdaptation Pfaue's own novel]] of the same name and stars Creator/JohannaWokalek, August Zirner, Marc Hosemann, Jürgen Tarrach, Delphine Sérina, Adele Neuhauser, Richy Müller and Jürgen Vogel.
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5The story is set in the first half of the 20th century in Germany. Ruth Goldfisch (Wokalek) is the daughter of a Jewish banker. She marries an impoverished non-Jewish baron, Albert von Roll, in 1913, and turns his dilapidated estate near the town of Bleicherode into a flourishing cherry farm. Albert is mobilized during UsefulNotes/WorldWarI and gets injured, and Ruth does everything she can to help him get back into shape, only for him to die by accident. Ruth then loses both of her parents (her mother by accident, her father by suicide).
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7When the UsefulNotes/{{Nazi|Germany}}s take power in 1933, Ruth decides not to leave the country, preferring not to abandon her cherry orchard, even as Jewish people are being more and more persecuted. She ends up going into clandestinity as UsefulNotes/WorldWarII breaks out.
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9!!''The Cherry Queen'' provides examples of:
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11* BittersweetEnding: Ruth survives World War II, but not her SecondLove, and Gretchen has perished in a [[UsefulNotes/TheHolocaust Death Camp]].
12* BookBurning: The second episode ends with the infamous May 1933 Nazi book burnings at Bebelplatz in UsefulNotes/{{Berlin}}.
13* BrokenBird: Ruth's life is marred by tragedies, but she keeps going.
14* CharacterNarrator: The youngest of the Goldfisch sisters, Käthe, narrates at the beginning.
15* DayOfTheJackboot: January 1933, obviously enough. Then Brownshirts start appearing in Bleicherode.
16* {{Determinator}}: Ruth is determined to stay on the estate in Bleicherode even if it's increasingly difficult and perilous for her after the Nazis take over the country.
17* DeterminedHomesteader: Ruth is determined to stay on the Bleicherode estate no matter what, harvesting cherries until the day she's forced to hide as [[UsefulNotes/TheHolocaust dark times are falling on people like her]].
18* DrivenToSuicide: Ruth's father Samuel Goldfisch commits suicide sometime after World War I when he gets bankrupted.
19* DroppedABridgeOnHim: Albert dies crushed by a falling tree sometime after World War I, which devastates Ruth.
20* HeteronormativeCrusader: The Brownshirts of Bleicherode pester two lesbian friends of Ruth.
21* HillbillyMoonshiner: Ruth gets rapidly bored when hiding in the basement of her home during World War II, so she decides to build herself a distillery in said basement, and then consumes her own homemade booze. She also distillates alcohol because she can't stand being inactive after it's become very clear she can't harvest her beloved cherry orchard anymore, lest she wants to get caught and deported.
22* ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: Ruth's mother tragically dies when trying to remove a birdcage from a framework on which scythe blades (used for harvests in the orchard) are hanging. She trips and falls on the ground, and the scythe blades fall on her, pointy end first, much to Ruth's horror.
23* ImpoverishedPatrician: Albert von Roll has a nobility title, but his family has been impoverished. Then Ruth takes matter in her own hands and turns his estate into a profitable cherry orchard.
24* JewishMother: Ruth's mother is quite invasive.
25* LivingOutAChildhoodDream: Owning a farm and working on it has been Ruth's dream since her childhood and she gets to live it.
26* OfficerAndAGentleman: Albert is as gentlemanly an officer as they come.
27* OpeningMonologue: The youngest of the Goldfisch sisters, Käthe, narrates at the beginning.
28* PlayingTheHeartStrings: Violin is often used on the soundtrack for the sad/tragic moments.
29* TheRoaringTwenties: {{Crossdresser}} [[TheChanteuse chanteuse]] Tina from Berlin gives a show in Bleicherode in the late 1920s. Just when she's finished, the local group of Brownshirts comes with torches and their own chants to loudly interrupt the party.
30* StandardSnippet: Among the Brownshirts' chants, the most recognizable is the "Horst Wessel Lied", the Nazi party's anthem which immediately indicates what they are and what they're up to.
31* ThoseWackyNazis: "Wacky" in the sense of "pathetic {{fat|bastard}} shell of a man". The local Brownshirts leader engages in antisemitic slurs directed at Ruth. One night, while he's drunk, [[PayEvilUntoEvil Ruth's friends beat him up]].
32* TrainStationGoodbye: Ruth has to say goodbye to Albert at the train station as he departs for the war in 1914.
33* UndyingLoyalty: Ruth's non-Jewish friends help in protecting her in clandestinity during the war. Without them, she would have likely died.

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