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1-39 of 39
- A hilarious and at times provocative film about a middle-aged American single-mother living in Switzerland and her quest to find out if she'll be invisible when she's no longer the woman with the biggest breasts in the room.
- For the first time one of Hollywood's greatest stars tells his own story, in his own words. From a childhood of poverty to global fame, Cary Grant, the ultimate self-made star, explores his own screen image and what it took to create it.
- Today, all anybody needs to run is the determination and a pair of the right shoes. But just fifty years ago, running was viewed almost exclusively as the domain of elite male athletes who competed on tracks. With insight and propulsive energy, director Pierre Morath traces running�۪s rise to the 1960s, examining how the liberation movements and newfound sense of personal freedom that defined the era took the sport out of the stadiums and onto the streets, and how legends like Steve Prefontaine, Fred Lebow, and Kathrine Switzer redefined running as a populist phenomenon.
- A film that tells the story of American performer Loie Fuller, a pioneer of dance, stage lighting and design.
- Digital advertising algorithms curate content precisely for users. Major tech firms claim to restrict disinformation yet still profit from harmful content, raising ethical concerns about democracy and online capitalism.
- Torture in huge internment camps, disappearances, forced labour, "re-education" of children and adults, mass sterilizations, generalized surveillance and destruction of memorial sites, including cemeteries: China's policy in Xinjiang towards the Uighurs, a population of 11 million Turkic-speaking people with a Muslim majority, is akin to genocide. In this land of the "Celestial Mountains" in the west of the country, rich in resources and a strategic gateway to the new Silk Roads cherished by Xi Jinping, the number of people arbitrarily detained is estimated at more than one million. For years, using the pretext of a supposed fight against radicalism and poverty, the Communist Party has been systematically persecuting this ethnic group, aiming to eradicate its culture.
- Documentary on the life and career of Keanu Reeves.
- The illegal recycling of electronics is a downright toxic business, as nearly three-quarters of the waste keep mysteriously disappearing from the recycling system.
- Forget water, oil and rare earths - there is a new resource everyone wants: our time. This documentary investigates how time has become money, and how we can claim back control over this precious but finite resource.
- The series tells the epic story of five European railway stations. We discover these Cathedrals of the Industrial Age in their present and history combining human stories with architecture, past and contemporary stories.
- Hidden deep in our guts, billion bacteria keep us healthY. Although invisible to the naked eye, they could revolutionise the future of medicine. This will happen, of course, if they don't disappear first because of our modern lifestyle.
- Leftving journalists and politicians talks about debt. No economist with insights in finance appears in the documentary.
- How lives of ordinary people are changed forever by using new technology, and thus, becoming cyborgs.
- Casey, the new flatmate, was everything Alessandro was not. He was energetic and adventurous - even charismatic. But instead of being annoyed, Alessandro started to document this strange creature with his videocamera. They were in their early twenties and living in Rome...every experience together felt new and exciting. But when Casey moved to the Middle East to work as a TV journalist, Alessandro's world was cranked open even more. Alessandro started collecting Casey's footage and soon found himself immersed in his travels. There were smugglers in Mali, medics in Gaza, and snipers in Aleppo...the world beyond Alessandro's comfortable, stagnant life in the West became vast and real. Alessandro lived vicariously through Casey for years until both of them started to change. Thanks to Alessandro's pensive approach to life, Casey finally started to look inwards, while Alessandro found the courage to break out of his comfort zone. Drawn from 15 years of footage, The Things We Keep is both an intimate look at friendship, and a celebration of people's common humanity.
- When the Arab Spring came to Syria, the rebellion chanted about freedom, dignity, influence. To Syrian/Norwegian director Nizam Najar this was obviously a very legitimate offset. Who would oppose this? Who could oppose removing Assad from power? Indeed, a noble cause. The peaceful demonstrations were met by brutal force, and a few years into the civil war that followed, the rebellion was stuck. Nizam returns to Aleppo where he was born to find out why the rebels still have not won the war.
- The Lives three women on a long journey across the United States have been transformed. They must cope with radical change and their loved-ones and friends speak about their decision.
- Scientists Dr. Laurent Vigliola and Dr. Will Robbins catc and relocate several bull sharks from Nouméa, New Caledonia, to a pristine coral reef in hopes they will adapt to a new home away from people and learn to feed away from the harbor and lagoon.
- Filmed in the United States, Canada, Uruguay, Mexico and Europe, this documentary shows the experience of pioneering countries in the legalization of cannabis.
- A street child tries to survive in the city but then escapes to the forest, where she encounters a creature even wilder than herself.
- Explores how global warming affects everyday life, focusing on the effects of heat, drought, expanding deserts and floods.
- Russians, and especially Muscovites, have been marching in ever greater numbers in recent months against a power that is considered to be liberticidal. More than ever, Russia appears to be a nation divided between those who keep a low profile in front of Putin's authoritarianism, or even support him, and those who fight him, often at the risk of their freedom. Who are these ordinary citizens who take all the risks, up to having to go into exile, to demand a Russia with a human face? For nearly a year, director Stéphane Bentura followed those who, often young and educated, made Alexei Navalny their figurehead, poisoned and then imprisoned upon his surprise return to Moscow in January 2021.
- 1991–TV EpisodeAntwerpen Centraal is a jewel in the "city of diamonds". Built in 1905, Its gigantic dome reminds of the Pantheon in Rome. The station tells stories about people who are not just passengers.
- Designed by Gustav Eiffel in 1874, Nyugati Pályaudvar was the world's fifth biggest train station at the time, and for many years Europe's most modern one. Today the patina of the years lays on the old station.
- 1991–TV EpisodeSt Pancras is the symbol of the great "Railway-Mania" of the industrial age. It was built for the second World Expo of London in 1862.