Warchief 2024 - Movies (May 5th)
Light 2024 - Movies (May 5th)
Parallax 2023 - Movies (May 5th)
Catching Fire The Story of Anita Pallenberg 2023 - Movies (May 5th)
House on Rockingham 2024 - Movies (May 4th)
Noahs Ark 2024 - Movies (May 4th)
Possessions 2024 - Movies (May 4th)
DC Down 2023 - Movies (May 4th)
Our Mothers Secret Affair 2024 - Movies (May 4th)
Tarot 2024 - Movies (May 4th)
Frontiers 2023 - Movies (May 3rd)
Prom Dates 2024 - Movies (May 3rd)
Unfrosted 2024 - Movies (May 3rd)
Something in the Water 2024 - Movies (May 3rd)
New Life 2023 - Movies (May 3rd)
Chief of Station 2024 - Movies (May 3rd)
Breaking Olympia The Phil Heath Story 2024 - Movies (May 3rd)
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S.W.A.T. - (May 4th)
Saturday Kitchen - (May 5th)
Raymond Blancs Royal Kitchen Gardens - (May 5th)
Love Your Weekend with Alan Titchmarsh - (May 5th)
90 Day Fiance- Pillow Talk - (May 5th)
Girl Meets Farm - (May 5th)
Be My Guest with Ina Garten - (May 5th)
The Last American Vagabond - (May 5th)
90 Day Fiance- Happily Ever After? - (May 5th)
John Mulaney Presents- Everybodys in L.A. - (May 5th)
Epleslang - (May 5th)
Homegrown - (May 5th)
Sunday Brunch - (May 5th)
The Farmer Wants a Wife - (May 5th)
LEGO Masters - (May 5th)
Monsters at Work - (May 4th)
The Only Way Is Essex - (May 5th)
My Life Is Murder - (May 5th)
Property Virgins - (May 5th)
Cold Justice - (May 5th)
Documents the writing, recording and performing of Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds’ sixteenth studio album, Skeleton Tree.
In this deeply personal film, director Roger Ross Williams sets out on a journey to understand the complex forces of racism and greed currently at work in America's prison system.
Follows dub poet master Linton Kwesi Johnson out of the recording studio onto the Brixton streets.
Eleven college students from different backgrounds participate in a retreat to discuss their experiences of race and racial prejudice. The circle is facilitated by Lee Mun Wah.
'Black girls don't play with black dolls', says the lyrics of Preta Rara's rap, one of the characters in It Looks Like Me. The documentary explores the lack of black dolls in the Brazilian market and shows the work of the artisans who try to change this scenario facing the gigantic toy industry with their handmade dolls.
On August 29, 1970 in East Los Angeles, a peaceful march of over 20,000 Chicanas/os, united in protest against the Vietnam War as part of the National Chicano Moratorium movement, was violently interrupted by an extreme, unjustifiable response by law enforcement. The tragic events of that day left four dead. Chicano Moratorium: A Question of Freedom is a harrowing, eyewitness documentary of the events of August 29, 1970 and their immediate aftermath, including the murder of Chicano journalist, Ruben Salazar. In contrast to biased TV news reports of the period, this student-made short offers an impassioned, unvarnished community account of the unrest and violence unleashed by the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department in response to the otherwise peaceful march in protest of disproportionate Chicano casualties in the Vietnam War.
For more than a century the great colonial powers put human beings, taken by force from their native lands, on show as entertainment, just like animals in zoos; a shameful, outrageous and savage treatment of people who were considered subhuman.
Director Michèle Stephenson’s new documentary follows families of those affected by the 2013 legislation stripping citizenship from Dominicans of Haitian descent, uncovering the complex history and present-day politics of Haiti and the Dominican Republic through the grassroots electoral campaign of a young attorney named Rosa Iris.
A scream amid so many silences, an attempt to rescue the human's gaze upon himself.
Nannies combines autobiographical elements with a reflection on the presence of nannies in Brazil. With a subjective narration, the film incorporates photographs, domestic footage and newspaper adds from the 20th century, as well as contemporary images of nannies and children, building a personal narrative about the presence of nannies in the daily lives of many Brazilian families. A situation where the affection is genuine, but does not dissolve violence and racism.
Is there an audience for Latin American movies? These are some of the questions posed by an Ecuadorian filmmaker whose latest movie was a commercial flop. He embarks on a query to find answers to his questions and relief for his despair. His research leads him to a giant contraband market in the port city of Guayaquil, where pirated movies from all over the world are sold for one dollar each. Here, he discovers a number of Ecuadorian low budget movies produced by amateurs, with titles he had never heard of before: from action packed productions to evangelical melodramas.