Dream Scenario 2023 - Movies (Jul 8th)
The Garfield Movie 2024 - Movies (Jul 8th)
Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes 2024 - Movies (Jul 8th)
Tarot 2024 - Movies (Jul 8th)
Abigail 2024 - Movies (Jul 8th)
Imaginary 2024 - Movies (Jul 8th)
Fly Me to the Moon 2024 - Movies (Jul 8th)
Liam Brady The Irishman Abroad 2023 - Movies (Jul 7th)
Back to Black 2024 - Movies (Jul 7th)
Andromeda 2 2024 - Movies (Jul 7th)
Andromeda 3 2024 - Movies (Jul 7th)
Longing 2024 - Movies (Jul 7th)
Rendel 2 Cycle of Revenge 2024 - Movies (Jul 7th)
The Seeds 2024 - Movies (Jul 7th)
Civil War 2024 - Movies (Jul 6th)
Fortunes of War 2024 - Movies (Jul 6th)
Goyo 2024 - Movies (Jul 5th)
The Imaginary 2023 - Movies (Jul 5th)
Boy Kills World 2023 - Movies (Jul 6th)
Hard Miles 2023 - Movies (Jul 6th)
Autumn and the Black Jaguar 2024 - Movies (Jul 6th)
Renovation Nation - (Jul 8th)
Dream Home Australia - (Jul 8th)
Have You Been Paying Attention? - (Jul 8th)
Love Island - (Jul 8th)
Deal or No Deal - (Jul 8th)
The Chase Australia - (Jul 8th)
Spent - (Jul 8th)
The Cook Up with Adam Liaw - (Jul 8th)
Snapped - (Jul 8th)
Sins of the South - (Jul 8th)
Tipping Point Australia - (Jul 8th)
The Traitors NZ - (Jul 8th)
Highway Cops - (Jul 8th)
Shark Week - (Jul 8th)
Magnolia Table with Joanna Gaines - (Jul 8th)
New Zealand’s Best Homes with Phil Spencer - (Jul 8th)
Countryfile - (Jul 8th)
Mayor of Kingstown - (Jul 7th)
House of the Dragon - (Jul 8th)
60 Minutes - (Jul 8th)
THE PEARL is a cinematic and intimate portrait of four transgender women who come out in their senior years. Set in logging towns in the Pacific Northwest, the visceral, observational story explores what it means to leave behind presenting as a man.
On 9 July 2021, the 422 workers at the GKN factory in Campi Bisenzio near Florence received their dismissal, by email. They immediately met in front of the factory, scared away the management's bodyguards and have been holding an open-ended meeting at the factory ever since. In June of 2022, they talk about how they are rooted in the territory, why 30,000 people demonstrated with them. They explain why they put their struggle under the slogan "Insorgiamo!" ("Let's rise up!"), the slogan of the italian partisans who liberated Florence in 1944. But they also talk about their collaboration with climate activists and what they would like to produce. But as things stand today, it is not the workers who are responsible for the ecological damage caused by production: "Nobody asked me what I would like to produce when they hired me. They hired me and that was it."
Supermodel Adriana Lima presents a behind-the-scenes look at the FIFA congress in the Rwandan capital of Kigali in March 2023, which made Kigali the first-ever host city of a FIFA elective congress in Africa.
InRealLife takes us on a journey from the bedrooms of British teenagers to the world of Silicon Valley, to find out what exactly the internet is doing to our children.
The monks were 5 American GIs in cold war Germany who billed themselves as the anti-Beatles; they were heavy on feedback, nihilism and electrical banjo. They had strange haircuts, dressed in black, mocked the military and rocked harder than any of their mid-sixties counterparts while managing to basically invent industrial, kraut rock, heavy metal, punk and techno music.
This documentary, set in the Lower East End of Vancouver's downtown core, is a pretty honest account of life on the streets in urban Canada. It is aimed at educating high school kids on the dangers of addiction to hard drugs and is the brainchild of a group of city police officers who videotape their interactions with local homeless personalities.
For years, filmmaker Sacha Polak has known that she carries the BRCA1 hereditary cancer gene, responsible for breast cancer, but she can't decide what to do. Does she have her breasts removed as a preventive measure to minimize the risk of developing cancer? What if she had them removed, thus forsaking her femininity, for nothing? Sacha decides to make a personal and open documentary about her search.
Childhood stories of the artist as a young lesbian and intimate tales of the lesbian as a young artist underscore the filmmaker's life of performances. With a Swiss army knife she robs an American Express Bank in Morocco, accosts a shepherd in a field on International Women's Day, and tap dances on Shirley Temple's star on Hollywood Boulevard. This child movie star was the ideal by which Hammer's ambitious mother measured her own Barbie. Grandma, already a cook for Lillian Gish in Hollywood, introduced the cute, loquacious child and her mother to D.W. Griffith. Lesbian autobiography is a slender genre, so Hammer draws from general culture studies for critique and to provide an ironic edge to the synthesized "voices of authority".
Nonfiction filmmaker Jill Morley documents her exploration of the exotic dancer (stripper) experience. Through tactfully selected and edited sequences, you get an insider's view into the job itself, how clubs chauffeur dancers, protect them, what's required of them, how much money they can make, tricks that dancers use to make more money, and keep clients at bay. By trying to work as a dancer, Morley gives the viewer a very personal perspective on the experience. Long-time professional dancers reveal personal anecdotes and feelings about how the job effects them in candid, personal interviews. A group discussion with several dancers is likewise illuminating.
Darwin meets Hitchcock in this documentary. Directors Dan Geller and Dayna Goldfine have created a parable about the search for paradise, set in the brutal yet alluring landscape of the Galapagos Islands, which interweaves an unsolved 1930s murder mystery with stories of present day Galapagos pioneers. A gripping tale of idealistic dreams gone awry, featuring voice-over performances by Cate Blanchett, Diane Kruger, and Gustaf Skarsgard.