Night of the Zoopocalypse 2024 - Movies (Jul 7th)
Magic Candies 2024 - Movies (Jul 7th)
Killing the Competition 2025 - Movies (Jul 7th)
The Sloth Lane 2024 - Movies (Jul 7th)
Mother Father Sister Brother Frank 2024 - Movies (Jul 7th)
Hill 2025 - Movies (Jul 7th)
Spiders on a Plane 2024 - Movies (Jul 6th)
Going Going Gone The Magic of the Home Run 2025 - Movies (Jul 6th)
Sharks Up Close with Bertie Gregory 2025 - Movies (Jul 6th)
Barbie Uncovered A Dream House Divided 2024 - Movies (Jul 6th)
Becoming Madonna 2024 - Movies (Jul 6th)
Alien Rubicon 2024 - Movies (Jul 5th)
Invention 2024 - Movies (Jul 5th)
The Rule of Jenny Pen 2024 - Movies (Jul 5th)
The Legend of Ochi 2025 - Movies (Jul 4th)
Eden 2024 - Movies (Jul 4th)
Canary Black 2024 - Movies (Jul 4th)
Deadly Escape 2025 - Movies (Jul 4th)
Never Blink 2025 - Movies (Jul 4th)
Mud Key 2024 - Movies (Jul 4th)
Warlord 2025 - Movies (Jul 4th)
Love Island USA- Laid Bare - (Jul 8th)
The Cook Up with Adam Liaw - (Jul 8th)
The Bold and the Beautiful - (Jul 8th)
Dover 24/7- Britains Busiest Port - (Jul 8th)
The Beat with Ari Melber - (Jul 8th)
Love Island - (Jul 7th)
Piers Morgan Uncensored - (Jul 7th)
Sun, Sea and Selling Houses - (Jul 7th)
Deadline- White House - (Jul 7th)
Chris Jansing Reports - (Jul 7th)
Katy Tur Reports - (Jul 7th)
24 Hours in Police Custody - (Jul 7th)
Malory Towers - (Jul 7th)
Killer Kings - (Jul 7th)
Murder By Medic - (Jul 7th)
Kiff - (Jul 7th)
Big City Greens - (Jul 7th)
Motorway Cops- Catching Britains Speeders - (Jul 7th)
Heels in the Hay - (Jul 7th)
My Music with Rhiannon Giddens - (Jul 7th)
This is quite a fascinating documentary that follows the turbulence of the relationship between Israel and the Palestinians from the Six-Day War through to the present day (2012). It's told using interviews from a succession of leaders of the secretive Shin Bet intelligence organisation peppered with some fairly potent archive across the timeframe. What makes this worth a watch, though, is that it doesn't shy away from offering contrasting - sometimes conflicting - opinions from senior players who were close to even more senior players as their nation struggled to remain independent amidst an Arab community that held wildly differing views on it's right to exist. There are periods of hope that quickly evaporate into more of desperation and violence and some of these contributors seem more prepared to accept that blame for these escalations does not necessarily lie on just one side of this lethal debate. It touches on the attempts at international interventions, the attempts at peace with the PLO and the Oslo Accord whilst demonstrating the resistance from within it's own borders to attempts at peaceful co-existence by the likes of the assassinated Yitzhak Rabin, Yasser Arafat and US President Bill Clinton. It's also the lack of comment from those third parties that adds a bit of gravitas to this film. We've no chatter from the booths of the CIA to clutter it up with an Americanised view of these problems. This offers an intimate assessment from people who were, quite literally, on the ground making life or death decisions at the time. It questions the potential for peace in the future, of heavily arming and empowering teenage men straight out of school, and of a collective fortress mentality that is forced upon them by as many internal preoccupations as external threats. It doesn't make any effort to represent the opposing perspective, but has an uncharacteristic honesty and candour to it that you might not agree with, but is worth listening to.
A young refugee travels from Russia to America in search of her lost father and falls in love with a gypsy horseman.
Petty con artists Slicker Smith and Herbie Brown mistakenly join the Army evading the cops. The cop chasing them winds up as their drill instructor. A rich young man and his former working class chauffeur are not only in the same unit, they're vying for a pretty girl who seems attracted to both.
On 16 July 1212, a Crusader army made up of Castilians, Aragonese and Navarrese (but also French, English and Germans) confronted the army of the Almohad Caliph an-Nasir at the foot of the Sierra Morena mountain range. The Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa, as the battle is known, is considered the most important battle of the Middle Ages on the Iberian Peninsula and is a key event in the history of Spain. More than 800 years later, a group of archaeologists and specialists have begun an archaeological study of the battlefield. Is everything that has been said about the battle true? What secrets does the terrain hide? And, above all, what can we learn today about events that took place hundreds of years ago and that pitted tens of thousands of people against each other in the south of our country?
Disheartened by futile combat, appalled by the corruption of their South Vietnamese ally, and constantly endangered by the incompetence of their own company commander, the young men find a possible way out of the war. They are told that if they purposely lose a soccer game against a South Vietnamese team, they can spend the rest of their tour playing exhibition games behind the lines.
The Tank and The Olive Tree recalls a certain number of forgotten fundamentals and sheds new light on the history of Palestine. By combining geopolitical analysis, interviews with international personalities who are experts on the subject and testimonies from Palestinian and French citizens, this documentary offers the keys to understanding what the media call the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Enough to rid people's minds of clichés and prejudices! If The Chariot and the Olivier is intended to be educational, it speaks above all of a magnificent territory, and of a people who constantly affirm that “to live is already to resist”...
A program originally produced for the BBC, and aired on television several times in 1986. Originally conceived as a long-form promotional piece for «Press to Play», the BBC staffer (Richard Skinner) persuades Macca to talk about much more, including one of the more in-depth interviews about Wings. All of the interview bits were done at Abbey Road studio 2, leading to some reminiscing on Paul's part. Scattered among the interview are some nice McCartney film rarities (including rarely seen promo clips/videos, concert footage from both the 1973 and 1976 tours, and even a bit of the never released "One Hand Clapping" film).
This program, culled from the over 28 hours of interview footage between Sir David Frost and U.S. President Richard M. Nixon, was originally broadcast in May of 1977. Never before, nor since, has a U.S. President been so candid on camera. Even more intriguing is the fact that Nixon agreed to appear on camera with no pre-interview preparation or screening of questions.
Near death, King David has a vision that his poet son, Solomon, should succeed him, rather than hot-headed Adonijah. Furious, Adonijah departs the court, swearing he will become king. Other rulers are concerned that Solomon's benevolent rule and interest in monotheism will threaten their tyrannical, polytheistic kingdoms. The Queen of Sheba makes an agreement with the Egyptian pharaoh to corrupt Solomon for their mutual benefit.
When Ex Colonel Merton discovers a burglar ransacking his home, he is shocked to find out that the thief is a former soldier from his tank regiment. When the thief escapes, Merton tries to contact former members of the regiment, in order to find out what set the thief on the road to crime.
With the most tech startups and venture capital per capita in the world, Israel has long been hailed as The Startup Nation. WIRED’s feature-length documentary looks beyond Tel Aviv’s vibrant, liberal tech epicenter to the wider Holy Land region – the Palestinian territories, where a parallel Startup Nation story is emerging in East Jerusalem, Nazareth, Ramallah and other parts of the West Bank, as well as in the Israeli cybersecurity hub of Be’er Sheva. And we will learn how the fertile innovation ecosystem of Silicon Wadi has evolved as a result of its unique political, geographical and cultural situation and explore the future challenges – and solutions – these nations are facing.
On the eve of the Israeli attack on Egypt in 1956, Israel declares martial law in all the occupied Arab territories without any previous notice. When the villagers of Kafr Kassem returned home from the fields, they were butchered and killed in what is known today as the massacre of “Kafr Kassem”.