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1-13 of 13
- In this David and Goliath story for the 21st century, a group of proud Scottish homeowners take on celebrity tycoon Donald Trump as he buys up one of Scotland's last wilderness areas to build a golf resort.
- A chronicle of the confrontation between billionaire Donald Trump and feisty 92-year-old Scottish widow, Molly Forbes.
- A documentary based on five years of research into a Michigan auto town where tens of thousands were drinking water into which poisonous lead had leached, and how officials failed to respond.
- This sequel to You've Been Trumped (2011) investigates how land developers like Donald Trump use golf as an excuse to build huge luxurious resorts at the expense of the locals and their ecosystem, and abuse natural resources.
- "Eye of the Storm" follows James Morrison, widely recognized as one of Britain's finest landscape artists, as he faces his greatest ever challenge. As his eyesight fails him, Morrison must create one final painting.
- TV follow-up to You've Been Trumped (2011) about the continued opposition to Donald Trump's plan to build a huge golf course on Aberdeenshire coastal wilderness. Baxter now looks at other global beauty spots under threat.
- TV Series
- This short documentary/drama follows award winning author James Robertson, as he explores the writing of his new novel News of the Dead, which is set in the fictional Glen Conach, Scotland. The book, which is published by Penguin, was written over five years and was partly shaped by the Covid-19 pandemic. The novel features characters set hundreds of years apart, but they are all linked by the same place: an ancient hermit, a nineteenth century charlatan and, in the present day, the Glen's eldest resident whose young schoolboy friend thinks he's seen a ghost. In the film, Director Anthony Baxter follows Robertson from his home in Newtyle, Scotland, deep into the rolling hills of a real glen - Glen Esk - in search of an ancient cross stone captured on an old postcard, once given to the novelist by a neighbor. The stone is said to have been carved by a pupil of the real-life seventh century Glen Esk hermit, Saint Drostan. While in the glen, Robertson reflects on how his own fiction is echoed by the reality of those hills today and what it is to live in a 'remote' place. Intercut with the documentary, are short dramatic scenes filmed in black and white, that give the viewer a glimpse of the three interlinked stories of Robertson's book. In particular, the scenes feature a young 'ghost girl' who appears in the grand old house that has stood in the glen for centuries.
- TV Series
- TV version "Eye of the Storm" which follows James Morrison, widely recognized as one of Britain's finest landscape artists, as he faces his greatest ever challenge. As his eyesight fails him, Morrison must create one final painting.