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1-16 of 16
- Explores the idea that the oceans, especially salt-marshes, sea-grasses and mangroves, can absorb more carbon than trees.
- An original four-part crime documentary series produced in association with HBO Asia and Star World, The Talwars: Behind Closed Doors examines the story of a double murder of a teenage girl and her family's household servant in Noida, India. Featuring never-before-seen exclusive interviews with Aarushi's parents, the series chronicles the twists and turns of a case that has confounded and divided India's law enforcement, media, judiciary and people alike.
- Rare film footage , restored and colourised for the first time, provides an intimate window into how everyday Edwardians lived, worked and socialised.
- A true crime documentary uncovering South Korea's most infamous cold case - the sudden disappearance of five young boys known as the 'Frog Boys'. Featuring interviews with the parents who have searched for answers for over three decades.
- South Korea's most infamous murder case involving one of the country's first known serial killers.
- Academy Award-nominee Fernando Meirelles (City of God (2002)) and Malian musician Inna Modja take us on an epic journey to the frontline of the climate crisis along Africa's ambitious Great Green Wall.
- Climate change is the daily reality for millions of people in Asia's cities, villages and coasts. Witness how people on the frontlines of the climate crisis confront the many challenges as it unfolds over 24 hours.
- Thirties in Colour: Countdown to War takes black-and-white films from the era and colourises the footage, bringing the past vividly back to life.
- Singapore on Film explores the earliest footage of Singapore, dating back to 1900. The films include 'Coolie Boys' and 'Ananas', filmed more than 100 years ago by the Pathe Brothers. Much of this remarkable archive has never been seen before, and has been specially restored and digitized by the British Film Institute. This fascinating archive shows that Singapore was a multi-cultural melting-pot, but life was grindingly hard for the majority. We see coolie dockers, rickshaw pullers, Sikh policemen and child labourers. Rare films of a grand Peranakan funeral and Hindu fire-walking show scenes both familiar and unfamiliar. Newly-discovered home movies shine an intimate light into the lives of the elite.
- This program takes viewers behind the scenes to reveal how the two-part documentary series 'Singapore on Film' was made. See how old film was restored, and how state-of-the-art graphics was achieved.
- 'This is Exile' is an extraordinary, intimate portrait of child refugees forced to flee from the violence of Syria's civil war to neighbouring Lebanon. Filmed over a year by the Emmy-award winning director Mani, the documentary tells the stories of the children's lives in their own words and captures the moving truth of how they deal with loss, hardship and the poignancy of dashed hopes.
- A new generation of social media activists are putting pressure on Western museums and private art collections, to return stolen artefacts to the countries from which they were looted from.
- A team of specially selected emergency doctors and nurses from Singapore General Hospital are rushed out to Nepal after a massive 7.8 magnitude earthquake left thousands dead in 2015.
- Bangladeshi born, but British raised artist, Rana Begum, is best known for her minimalist, abstract sculpture. Whether it is her delicate wire structures or large-scale public installation, all her work explores the principles of light, colour and form. Rana's command of this trinity allows her to create art that changes each time you see it. This was episode number 73 in Bloomberg's arts series, Brilliant Ideas.
- An assortment of video, colour and sound, Anri Sala's work demands your attention. Striving for communication that goes beyond the limits of language, is exhibitions challenge the viewer to question politics, music and history. Although his art can take a variety of forms, from documentary to live performance, it is Anri's ability to manipulate sound that makes his work unique. (Source: Bloomberg)
- Morland Sanders asks who will take Britain's low-skilled jobs - picking food, cleaning toilets and packing parcels if EU workers are no longer plentiful and looks into reports of a shadowy North Korean workforce in Europe.