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- Faced with climate change, many countries have embarked on the energy transition. Since the COP21 in 2015, which set demanding targets for reducing greenhouse gases, green energies have been on the rise. The electric car has thus become the mascot of this revolution. But manufacturers remain discreet about the carbon footprint of their cars marked "zero emission". Because not only do they consume electricity that is not always clean, but they also consume rare metals such as cobalt or lithium, the extraction of which causes havoc on the other side of the world. In China, for example, champion of rare metals, in Heilongjiang province, a carpet of toxic dust covers agricultural regions.
- In Colombia, the "whites" think that the Indian of Amazonia does not feel anything because there are no words in his language to express feelings. Is it possible that a whole people feel nothing and have no words to speak of love? Director Sergio Guataquira Sarmiento, himself a descendant of an almost extinct indigenous Colombian community, went to meet the Cácuas, to talk about their feelings, their loves, their loneliness. In doing so, he reconnected with his own Indianness. With humor and tenderness, the Cácuas try to teach him what it is to be a native. This initiatory quest is an emotional x-ray of an entire people.
- In the Fraternity of Tiberiade, a catholic community in Belgium, 40 young brothers and sisters share a life punctuated by prayer, study and manual labor.
- This documentary gives a full background into the world of international football (national soccer teams) and the corrupt company that controls its organisation, FIFA. World Cups go to the highest bidder and almost everyone has a price. The film gives an interview filled understanding of the world's largest corrupted sportsorganisation and how the Swiss banks are complicit in it since the 1960's.
- One of Africa's most populous countries is a very sick giant. The film takes us to meet the people, the activists, and the hostage takers.
- Coming in all shapes and sizes, bacteria are present in every corner of the Earth. Dive into the world of Bacteria to experience the latest discoveries and scientific knowledge surrounding these plentiful and necessary microbes.
- Thomas Pesquet spent 196 days in orbit around Earth. A daily routine filled with a multitude of scientific experiments intended to prepare for future missions farther afield. The French astronaut dreams of one day setting foot on Mars (2040 is the target), but innumerable scientific problems remain to be solved.
- Deforestation, migration, toxic chemicals coupled with other factors have increased the population of mosquitoes. They are now able to reproduce in cold climates making the spread of diseases like Zika, Dengue, more prevalent than before.
- SOS is the ultimate cry for help of a crew in distress - Royal ships, supposedly unsinkable vessels, abandoned crews, ecological disasters, unexplained disappearances, abysses and remains require additional decoding - Using the latest technologies, and with the assistance of the finest archaeologists, historians and naval engineers, this documentary series retraces, minute by minute, the exact circumstances of these disasters. The chain of events leading to the wreck is decoded at a breathtaking pace. Time is relentless and suspense awaits at every turn.
- From the Himalayas to Argentina, via Indonesia and Ethiopia, a documentary series in seven parts to discover the beauty and the immense variety of the world of bees.
- Each month on France 3, this new TV series documentary give a new reading of the human life trying to understand how people reacts to the world around them.
- "The Tribe of the Invisible" is a humorous docu-animation merging reality and fantasy through testimonials, interviews, and animated drawings. Dive into its captivating world by shedding fears and preconceptions.
- In New Caledonia Carsud is the bus company and the symbol of the social history of the country. During the 2000s, Carsud went on guerrilla strikes. In 2010 the company became a model of social dialogue.
- In Nouméa, 30+ squatter settlements host 4000 families living in dire conditions. They seek a better life but are excluded from national development plans. But barefoot children in these settlements laugh and dream.
- Emmanuel Tjibaou, son of the murdered Kanak independence leader Jean-Marie Tjibaou, follows in his father's footsteps and questions the people who mattered in his life.
- Valaam islands, frozen six months a year in the ice of Lake Ladoga, houses the oldest monastery in Russia. Founded in the 11th century, according to the tradition, the prayer of Valaam Monastery was interrupted for nearly 50 years, when the communist regime expelled the monks of the island in the 1940s. But in 1989, six monks dock at Valaam, to restore monastic life which has been broken. 23 years later, they are about 150, and most devastated churches are rebuilt. In this documentary, you will discover the daily life of the monks of Valaam, in the large main monastery, and in hermitages lost in the woods of the surrounding islands. Handwork, painting icons, great liturgies in the night: a life of constant struggle with oneself, rooted in obedience and perpetual prayer. Portrait of a renaissance in faith, which makes this extraordinary place, the impressive symbol of spiritual awakening throughout Russia.
- One moment in the sky, the next on the ground, this series casts an original eye over some destinations chosen for their beauty, their authenticity and their richness, using both aerial images and interviews with people living there.
- Three friends, skydiving enthusiasts, members of the National French team, and free-fall champions, are training together. Discover a discipline where aerial choreographies are linked together for 45 seconds, at more than 250 km per hour.
- The son of a carpenter, Émile Couzinet started to work as a traveling projectionist and then director of the Royan Casino. He then began to produce, direct and distribute numerous low-budget comedies, of which he was also the screenwriter.
- A huddle with Marquesians from Nuku Hiva, the main island of the Archipelago, who speak of their island, its customs and its history with pride. Whatever they do in life, they all rely on the knowledge of the elders to question the future.
- From North to South, the coasts of France display an astonishing variety of landscapes. The varied coastline, its seas and oceans, its colors and nature, all of which constitute its diversity, are the subject of this mini-series.
- For Venezuelan musician and bassist Oscar D'León, salsa is like second nature. That's why he is affectionately nicknamed The Pharaoh of Salsa. He shows us his real self with brilliance during his July 13, 2010, concert at the Zénith Paris.
- At the beginning of the 3rd millennium, in the difficult context of the decline of priestly vocations, men still decide to abandon everything to give their lives to God, in the service of believers. This film proposes to discover these young priests, on whose shoulders the whole Church will rest in a few years. For a week we follow three of them in their daily life: accompaniment of their flocks, meetings, organization, celebrations in parishes, times of prayer and relaxation.
- For several years, prehistorians, archaeologists and musicologists have been trying to find the moment when music was born. The art of our ancestors has long been considered exclusively visual. But discoveries have shaken these representations, in particular that of perforated bird bones resembling flutes, more than 35,000 years old, found by the archaeologist Suzanne Münzel during the 1990s in the German Jura. Exploring the caves "with their ears", acousticians have also established links between the location of cave paintings and the resonance of the walls. So many advances that encourage us to reconsider certain prehistoric objects. Seen as cereal pestles, cylinders from the Ivory Coast, since renamed "lithophones", produce a rain of crystalline notes.
- 1997– 1h 30m6.2 (9)TV EpisodeIn the midst of their torment, those given the sad task of building and launching the makeshift craft named it 'The Machine'. A hundred and forty-nine people were piled onto it, by choice or by force: only seven survived. Today, it is better known as the raft of the Medusa.
- Every year, more than 50,000 ships plow the seas of the globe and some of them pose a permanent threat to the environment. This is especially the case of oil tankers, which connect the countries producing the black gold with the refineries of the entire world. Two wrecks of such supertankers have gone down in history for having created the biggest oil spills ever seen in Europe. On December 12 1999, the Erika, a tanker with a cargo of 31,000 tons of heavy fuel oil, was caught in an exceptional storm off St-Nazaire and finally sank, spilling thousands of tons of oil along 400km of coastline. Some twenty years earlier, in 1978, an identical wreck had already fouled the coasts of Brittany. The tanker's name was the Amoco Cadiz and its wreck created an unprecedented ecological disaster.
- In the 17th century, huge sailing ships plowed the world's oceans to impose the rule of kings by cannon fire. Archives of the period tell of numerous maritime disasters. However, some almost fell into oblivion. In November 1664, the frigate, La Lune, with 800 soldiers on board to be evacuated from Algeria to France, sinks within a few minutes near Toulon, for some mysterious reason, drowning nearly 700 men. A few years earlier, the Vasa casts off with great pomp for its maiden voyage. Suddenly, a simple gust of wind capsizes the Vasa, which sinks like a stone into the waters of the harbor of Stockholm before the eyes of the stunned crowd. It will require a wait of four centuries till the discoveries of the wrecks of the Vasa and La Lune finally reveal the conditions of their mysterious disappearances.
- Every sailor who travels the Mediterranean knows that you can never trust appearances with this tranquil sea. From the islands of the Aegean Sea to the Strait of Gibraltar, when the wind blows this paradisiacal seascape can rapidly transform into a veritable hell. In 1855, caught in a hurricane of the coast of Corsica, the frigate Sémillante, shatters on the reefs of a tiny archipelago with not a single survivor among the 700 crew and military on board. A century later, it's close to the Balearic Islands that the steamship Lamoricière, after having gone to the assistance of a small freighter in difficulty, sinks in the middle of a storm taking to their graves nearly 300 souls, including a good number of children. A tragedy that is forever etched in memory.