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- Eva is a paraplegic. On her birthday, her friend Sophie gives her a strange Advent calendar. It's not the traditional treats you find when you open each drawer, but quirky gifts that are scary and get bloodier.
- Explore the world from the highest peaks of Africa to the skyscrapers of New York City. Each documentary draws an accurate portrait of each country, city, and island, far from postcard clichés and tourist attractions. Educational as well as informative, Discovering the World was filmed in HD and contains high quality aerial cinematography. Viewers will enjoy learning about the everyday life, history, geography, culture, and economy of each country.
- At 81, Al Pacino celebrates a half-century career. In the 1940s, the little Italian-American from the South Bronx imitates in front of a mirror the stars he discovers on the big screen, before the revelation of the theater in a room of his neighborhood. A fan of Marlon Brando, the teenager took on a series of odd jobs before enrolling in the Actors Studio of his future mentor Lee Strasberg. Magnetic face and contained violence, Al Pacino alone embodies the New York of vertigo and fury of the 1970s, as evidenced by "Panic in Needle Park", the film by Jerry Schatzberg (1971), which reveals him as an incandescent junkie. The following year, Coppola installed him in the firmament as Michael Corleone in "The Godfather". In this portrait, Jean-Baptiste Péretié explores the New York of the 1970s in the footsteps of the star.
- They grew up under the Nazi regime. They pledged to give their lives for Hitler. They were fanatics who would not be stopped. They were the 20,000 teenagers who made up the 12th SS Panzer Division. Unleashed in France to halt the Allied invasion, they would sow terror and destruction in their wake. Historical colorized archives and a handful of survivors tell us this story.
- Recreations, interviews and restored archival footage tell the story of NASA's Apollo program.
- Since the most recent and historic flooding tragedies in Southeast Asia (in 2004 and 2011), researchers around the world are mobilized to study the complex mechanics of tsunamis.
- In 1812 Napoleon gathers the largest army of all times, of about 600.000 men from 24 controlled countries to invade Russia. 172 day later they will have to withdraw, 400.000 soldiers either killed or captured. Why dis this happen?
- -Manipulating research to delay the progress of knowledge on certain subjects is part of the strategy of a growing number of industrialists. Researchers set out to dismantle the mechanisms behind this phenomenon, which is gaining ground.
- How do sharks, sperm whales, dolphins have sex? The most spectacular and difficult scenes to film under the sea.
- Explore the Earth and the most beautiful natural paradises in the world. These stunning locales are preserved thanks to the dedication of local populations. Meet the inhabitants of these lands who have developed small businesses to welcome visitors in their environment, and helped create a new form of travel: sustainable tourism. Shot in stunning high definition, Green Paradise tells the stories of these magical places, the inhabitants who cherish the land, and those visitors who come to experience its splendors.
- Drawing on a life's work defined by controversial and ground-breaking ideas, the world's greatest architect has inaugurated his first Australian building - and debate still rages over whether it is eyesore or icon. Our film follows the drama as Gehry'Äôs vision for this commission is realized.
- The Messenger is an artful investigation into the causes of songbird mass depletion and the people working to turn the tide. This visually thrilling film reveals how the issues facing birds also pose daunting implications for our planet.
- This documentary tells the story of how the Nazis stormed the fortress of law, how they gradually subjugated the judiciary and the legal system in order to assert the supremacy of the "people's community" over individual rights. This story is told through four singular destinies: Johann Reichhart, the Bavarian executioner and world record-holder for judicial executions; Lilo Gloeden, a committed woman; Werner Best, a Nazi jurist; and Hans Litten, a democratic lawyer. From 1933 to 1945, during the twelve years of the Nazi era, Hitler's courts handed down some 16,000 death sentences on their own soil. 30,000 more with the military tribunals.
- Screen icon Charlotte Rampling has fascinated the world of cinema, fashion and photography with her mysterious and almost inaccessible beauty. A major figure in genre and auteur films, she is unclassifiable: between presence and absence, shyness and audacity, she's always hypnotic, magnetic and fascinating. From her film debut in the mid-1960s in England, to her unconventional career path, through the tragic loss suicide of her older sister that will irremediably mark her acting, this film is a dive into the existential quest of a complex actress, whose every facet is discovered through her roles. Through a conversation with the actress herself, along with personal archives and extracts from her films, this documentary raws a dazzling portrait of her life and career.
- Behind the iconic Eiffel Tower lies the story of an incredible challenge to erect the first thousand-foot tower, pitting Gustave Eiffel against now forgotten rivals, iron vs stone, engineers vs architects, and modernists vs classicists.
- World War Il in Europe ended on the 8th of May 1945. Hitler is dead. Allied armies have occupied Germany. The death camps have been liberated. But, for the Jews of Europe, the suffering, the dying, and the grief continues, and still continues to this very day.
- An interstellar adventure in search of an exoplanet that supports complex life. We ask the greatest minds in the world: How do we get there?
- A CSI of art, The Portrait of Leonardo da Vinci brings us to the heart of an extensive investigation involving world-renowned experts, art historians, scientists and even police detectives, using the most innovative scientific techniques to solve one of the great art mysteries of this century. There will be amazing discoveries - like the trace of a thumb embedded in the paint, the same fingerprint found in « Lady with an Ermine », another of Leonardo's paintings.
- Published posthumously in 1796, Diderot's novel, an astonishingly modern feminist indictment, caused the same uproar in France in the 1960s, when Jacques Rivette decided to adapt it, as it had in Restoration France one hundred and fifty years earlier.
- Olivier Weber took his camera around the world, to the compartments and wagons of trains. A train is a unique starting point to discover a country, meet the people, enjoy the stories, and the daily life of those met along the way.
- On 18 June 1940, Charles de Gaulle's appeal was heard as far as the depths of the oceans. It is here that one of the War's most important resistance movements came into being: The Maquisards de la Mer. Heading it up was the submarine "Rubis". This film gives a voice to the forgotten members of the Resistance by means of unpublished testimonies and rare texts written by the Rubis' crew members.
- Join a team of tireless adventurers and experienced divers on two polar expeditions to explore the hidden faces of the Arctic and the cold depths of Greenland's fjords. They will be surrounded by a multidisciplinary team of experts made up of sailors, scientists, photographers, researchers, and doctors. Immerse yourself into the unknown in this is a fabulous human and scientific adventure.
- The incredible story of two small remote controlled rovers sent by the Soviets to the moon in the 1970's.
- TV Series
- In the Indian Himalayas, two best friends have to leave their family to fulfill their destiny as women.
- In half a century, the world has changed dramatically. Everywhere, except Cuba, that is. Isolated by the rest of the world for 60 years, Cuba has developed its own uniqueness and identity. Rediscover Cuba, from the traditional Tumba Francesca dancers and organic agronomists, to the cigar manufacturers and scientists seeking to preserve Cuba's biodiversity, meet those who uphold "La Cubania."
- On June 6, 1968, Robert F. KENNEDY, a staunch opponent of racial discrimination, supporter of the inhabitants of poor neighborhoods and advocate of social change in America, was assassinated. With him, a whole section of the American dream collapsed. From the day of President Kennedy's assassination to the death of his brother Bobby Kennedy at the Ambassador Hotel almost five years later, this film looks back at the journey of this statesman and his fight for a fairer world. Four years during which Bobby Kennedy will fly on his own wings in politics, four years that will leave an indelible mark on American politics, four years full of hope, but ending with a bitter disillusionment. Through unique archives, discover a new portrait of this Kennedy that everyone called "Bobby".
- TV Mini SeriesFaraway, isolated regions, home to millions of cultures, islands invite us to reconnect with our roots, to question our relationship with our territories, our environment and our beliefs. Special repositories of an intangible heritage, their identity can be challenged in a world in full mutation, in a hurry to evolve towards greater efficiency and virtuality. How do island peoples, deeply attached to their roots, associate tradition and modernity? From the Caribbean (Haiti) to the Indian Ocean (Madagascar) to the Atlantic Ocean (Newfoundland), the inhabitants of these territories are trying to find their place in a changing world. Through the prism of art and creation, each episode of this series lets us discover an island, its history, its current challenges and its people, resolutely turned towards the future.
- This is the story of a blind Chinese flutist, Wu Jing, from remote rural China, and her quest to play in a world leading symphony orchestra.
- Since the Islamic Revolution and the hostage-taking of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran in November 1979, Iran has been living under economic sanctions whose intensity varies according to the confrontational policies of the two countries. In 2015, the Vienna Agreement, signed by the Islamic Republic, the United States, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, China and Russia, generated an unprecedented wave of hope: Iran renounced acquiring nuclear weapons in exchange for the partial lifting of the embargo. Less than three years later, in May 2018, the Trump administration announced its unilateral withdrawal from the agreement and the reinstatement of sanctions, which had been tightened over the months. Cornered, Iran broke away from its commitments to force its partners to react.
- Series of intimate portraits of actors and actresses. To obtain truly personal and intimate comments from her interlocutors, director Raphaëlle Catteau set up an authentic and innovative self-interview system, the actor playing a reporter.
- Hjalmar Schacht is a largely forgotten figure. And yet, Hitler's rise to power depended on him. He was the Banker of the Third Reich, but paradoxically, was never a member of the Nazi party, despite being one of its pillars.
- In this 5-part mini-series, each film presents a fragrant plant species (tonka bean, sandalwood, lavender, ylang-ylang, and rose), its history, the threat it faces, its environment and the indigenous people associated with its production.
- In the coldest of winter, in the mountains of Zanskar, the Buddhist monks of Phuktal leave their monastery
- Documentary that offers fresh insights into the Korean War, a conflict that, despite the 1953 armistice, has never officially ended.
- Before being an azure paradise, the lagoon of New-Caledonia is above all a paradise for sharks. Fierce predators or astute scavengers? Scavengers, that are not too picky when it comes to their menu: feathers, fins or fur, anything will do.
- There is a man who have been dedicated obstinately his life for over 20 years to an universal mission: he looks, finds, archives and plays the music that it has been composed in concentration camps during the Second World War. He is Italian and his name is Francesco Lotoro. His passionate research is now a movie, a journey through time that wants to fight the oblivion and to preserve the memories of men and women whom found their way against destruction through out their music.
- An immersion into the heart of the USA to discover one of the fastest growing industries in the country: marijuana business. How did this plant go from illegal drug to a medicinal use?
- This film is a journey into the complex world of misunderstandings between sociocultural actors, parents, and children in the Southern Suburban Quartier of Villeneuve (the former 1968 Olympic Village) in Grenoble, France. The difficulty in giving meaning, in agreeing on an action, slows down the setting up of projects, wears out the good humor of all concerned. A careful approach in a sensitive area where preconceived ideas proliferate, little everyday nothings that change everything.
- Deep down at the bottom of the ocean lies the mysterious world of the abyss. In the midst of boiling, toxic geysers, a rich ecosystem flourishes. This miracle is possible thanks to bacteria, micro-organisms crucial to all living beings. How can bacteria survive in such extreme conditions?.