Five Nights at Freddys 2023 - Movies (Dec 10th)
Blood 2022 - Movies (Dec 10th)
Wonka 2023 - Movies (Dec 10th)
Scarygirl 2023 - Movies (Dec 10th)
A Cowboy Christmas Romance 2023 - Movies (Dec 10th)
Pencils Vs Pixels 2023 - Movies (Dec 10th)
Manny Pacquiao Unstoppable Force 2023 - Movies (Dec 10th)
Christmas on Cherry Lane 2023 - Movies (Dec 10th)
Christmas of Yes 2023 - Movies (Dec 10th)
Guillermo del Toros Pinocchio 2022 - Movies (Dec 10th)
All Souls 2023 - Movies (Dec 10th)
Meet You in Scotland 2023 - Movies (Dec 10th)
Monster Grizzly 2023 - Movies (Dec 9th)
Ouija Shark 2 2022 - Movies (Dec 9th)
Big Freakin’ Snake 2023 - Movies (Dec 9th)
Dark Entities 2023 - Movies (Dec 9th)
The Marvels 2023 - Movies (Dec 9th)
The Hunger Games The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes 2023 - Movies (Dec 9th)
Runs in the Family 2023 - Movies (Dec 9th)
Runner 2022 - Movies (Dec 9th)
Cat Person 2023 - Movies (Dec 9th)
Doctor Detective - (Dec 10th)
Strictly Come Dancing - (Dec 10th)
Planet Earth III - (Dec 10th)
The Good Stuff with Mary Berg - (Dec 10th)
Delicious Miss Brown - (Dec 10th)
Saturday Kitchen - (Dec 10th)
Vigil - (Dec 10th)
Welcome to Samdal-ri - (Dec 10th)
The Famous Five - (Dec 10th)
Fletchers Family Farm - (Dec 10th)
Love Your Weekend with Alan Titchmarsh - (Dec 10th)
The Weakest Link - (Dec 10th)
Football Focus - (Dec 10th)
Tucker on X - (Dec 10th)
Ridiculousness - (Dec 10th)
Fatal Family Feuds - (Dec 10th)
Prosecuting Evil With Kelly Siegler - (Dec 10th)
48 Hours - (Dec 10th)
The Hundred with Andy Lee - (Dec 10th)
Paper Dolls - (Dec 10th)
Incarcerated participants in a mental health experiment watch videos of sunset-soaked beaches, wildflowers and forests on loop, prompting them to reflect on isolation and wilderness. Equal parts meditation and provocation, Blue Room identifies the damage done by withholding access to the outdoors and how we are all prisoners when the essential human need for communion with nature is denied.
On August 7th 1974, French tightrope walker Philippe Petit stepped out on a high wire, illegally rigged between New York's World Trade Center twin towers, then the world's tallest buildings. After nearly an hour of performing on the wire, 1,350 feet above the sidewalks of Manhattan, he was arrested. This fun and spellbinding documentary chronicles Philippe Petit's "highest" achievement.
An absurd game of “finding happiness” is being played by local Latvian coyotes* and illegal immigrants on the Russian and the European Union border. It is a game with no winner – all participants are driven to play by the sense of despair. While one side leaves home and undertakes a perilous journey to the other side of the globe, hoping to spend the rest of their lives in a free country, the other side risks their freedom to earn a chance to stay right where they are, in their homeland. *coyote – someone who smuggles illegal immigrants
An abstract perspective into two young South African workers in the heart of Johannesburg's industrial sector during Covid-19
Mike Porcel is the lost member of the Cuban Nueva Trova: his lack of revolutionary spirit condemned him to the repudiation of his peers and turned him into a pariah for a decade, until he managed to go into exile. Without rancor, but without forgetting, the film reconstructs his story and revives a forgotten brilliance.
As Puerto Rico falls deeper and deeper into an unprecedented crisis this is Vietnam’s story, a community or barrio located on the coast of Guaynabo fighting an illegal expropriation at the hands of a career politician. Their experience echoes the island’s current struggle with; an unparalleled migration, a notion of progress fueled by corruption, crippling economic debt, displaced poor and middle class families whose land is being purchased by millionaires, and the slow to non-existent reconstruction of infrastructure after Hurricane Maria.
An exceptional documentary filmed in 1978 by Swedish directors Björn Blixt and Peter Englesson showing the behind-the-scenes of the film Christ Stopped at Eboli (1979) by Francesco Rosi.
There are very few icons in Argentine culture capable of appealing to both popular and elitist tastes. Leonardo Favio was undoubtedly one of them. An unseasonable Peronist attached to the liturgy of his land, the director, born in the province of Mendoza, was and artist at every craft. a Renassaince man, but above all, a filmmaker. This is how "Favio: Chronicle of a Director" recaptures him, as a man of film who fed from radio, acting, music and painting in order to build up the handful of rhapsodies with which he adorned argentinean cinematography