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1-27 of 27
- Writer James Baldwin tells the story of race in modern America with his unfinished novel, Remember This House.
- When the Hutu nationalists raised arms against their Tutsi countrymen in Rwanda in April 1994, the violent uprising marked the beginning of one of the darkest times in African history which resulted in the deaths of almost 800,000 people.
- The path to the new world, an unsettling and intricate story of genocides. Conquest, slavery and the fabrication of "Whiteness".
- The early years of Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels and Jenny Marx, between Paris, Brussels and London.
- A Black family in North Carolina has been harassed for decades by land developers attempting to take their waterfront property.
- The ultimate and comprehensive documentary film about the exceptional writer George Orwell.
- A look at the final moments of a ruler in Haiti as a violent revolution erupts around him.
- Documentary about African political leader Patrice Lumumba, who was Prime Minister of Zaire (now Congo) when he was assassinated in 1961.
- After the terrible January 2010 earthquake in Haiti, a privileged couple struggles to reinvent a life amid the rubbles of their villa in Port-au-Prince's upscale neighborhood of Pacot. Destitute and in desperate need for money to repair their home, the couple decides to rent the remaining habitable part of the villa to Alex, a high-level foreign relief worker, who brings Jennifer, aka Andrémise, his Haitian girlfriend, a sassy and ambitious young woman.
- Haiti during papa Doc's reign: not a fun place!
- A dramatisation of the events following the 1984 murder of the four-year old Gregory Villemin in Vosges, France.
- Haitian born filmmaker Raoul Peck takes us on a 2-year journey inside the challenging, contradictory and colossal rebuilding efforts in post-earthquake Haiti.
- Documentary about the effects of market economy and globalization on director Raoul Peck's homeland, Haiti.
- Chase Dellal is a medical examiner in Manhattan, whose life is unraveling enough to make her question her choices. Her job is being influenced by city politicos, and her relationship with a married man is getting sidetracked by his desire to run for office. Then Dimitri comes back into her life - he is a Haitian former classmate whose wife has been murdered and who has been forced to flee his country. Romance mixes with political and ethical questions.
- Shot in March-April 1994, before the return of US-exiled Jean-Bertrand Aristide in Haiti, the film questions his relationship with then PM Robert Malval, the two "chiefs", once seemingly associates, but opposed in characters and worldview.
- A documentary about those separated from their families and returned to Haiti after completing jail time for often minor offenses, deportation pursuant to US antiterror laws. Some deportees had been in America for decades and had no memory or knowledge of how to deal with life in this sorely troubled nation.
- Marie Baronnet, a photojournalist based in Los Angeles, has been traveling along the border between Mexico and the United States for the past ten years, focusing on the typical "Mexican" culture of the inhabitants of this region. She focuses on the daily life of two families: one, from their arrival in Tijuana by a migrant caravan, to their crossing of the border and their request for asylum, in the hope of settling in Texas; the other, composed of a Mexican mother and her two children in Tucson, Arizona, who try to lead a normal life, although the husband and father have been deported to Honduras.
- TV Mini Series
- While he is Haiti's Minister of Culture, filmmaker Raoul Peck creates a video-letter which evokes the weariness and pain of the exile, and takes a bitter look at the state of affairs in a battered country torn by "300 years of resistance".
- Hebrew, which for centuries was a sacred language for the Jews of the diaspora, became, by political will, a language spoken daily from the beginning of the 20th century. What has been preserved, what has been forgotten, what has been repressed, what is it that requires resurgence? Writers and artists born in Israel are trying to describe their relationship to the religious dimension of Hebrew. The voice of some resonates with that of others, the words light up mutually, sometimes contradict each other: no version is necessary. The film deals with poetry and politics, religion and laity. It asks questions that are not irrelevant in other contexts. All modern and apparently secular languages are imbued with centuries of religious history, of which they still bear the marks.