Better Not Kill the Groove 2024 - Movies (Sep 7th)
Dont Turn Out the Lights 2023 - Movies (Sep 7th)
Off Ramp 2023 - Movies (Sep 7th)
Head Over Heels 2024 - Movies (Sep 7th)
Shoshana 2023 - Movies (Sep 6th)
The Demon Disorder 2024 - Movies (Sep 6th)
Rebel Ridge 2024 - Movies (Sep 6th)
Killer Babes 2024 - Movies (Sep 6th)
My First Film 2024 - Movies (Sep 6th)
The Well 2024 - Movies (Sep 5th)
It Ends with Us 2024 - Movies (Sep 5th)
South Park Joining the Panderverse 2023 - Movies (Sep 4th)
Geoff McFetridge Drawing a Life 2024 - Movies (Sep 4th)
Clawfoot 2023 - Movies (Sep 4th)
Dead Sea 2024 - Movies (Sep 4th)
Chestnut vs. Kobayashi Unfinished Beef 2024 - Movies (Sep 4th)
Wrongful Death 2023 - Movies (Sep 4th)
King Coal 2023 - Movies (Sep 4th)
The American 2023 - Movies (Sep 4th)
Adam Hills Foot Fault 2024 - Movies (Sep 4th)
You Gotta Believe 2024 - Movies (Sep 4th)
The Last American Vagabond - (Sep 8th)
The Thaw - (Sep 6th)
Bel-Air - (Sep 8th)
Snowpiercer - (Sep 8th)
Fight Night- The Million Dollar Heist - (Sep 8th)
Jesse Watters Primetime - (Sep 8th)
City of God- The Fight Rages On - (Sep 8th)
New House No Debt - (Sep 8th)
The Hit List - (Sep 8th)
The Chris McCausland Show - (Sep 8th)
Emperor of Ocean Park - (Sep 8th)
SEAL Team - (Sep 8th)
The Beat with Ari Melber - (Sep 8th)
Weekends with Jonathan Capehart - (Sep 8th)
Body Cam- On the Scene - (Sep 8th)
Lets Make a Deal - (Sep 8th)
Celebrity Catchphrase - (Sep 7th)
Casualty - (Sep 7th)
The Voice UK - (Sep 7th)
The Kitchen - (Sep 7th)
"I was visiting Jerome Hill. Jerome loved France, especially Provence. He spent all his summers in Cassis. My window overlooked the sea. I sat in my little room, reading or writing, and looked at the sea. I decided to place my Bolex exactly at the angle of light as what Signac saw from his studio which was just behind where I was staying, and film the view from morning till after sunset, frame by frame. One day of the Cassis port filmed in one shot." -JM
On January 8, 2005, the storm Gudrun pulled over southern Sweden and large parts of the Småland forest blew down. How do you cope when your food disappears overnight? Anders and Lisbeth Ericsson, who run a smaller farm, were hit hard by the storm. 70% of their 250 ha were blown down. This put them in a difficult economic and emotional crisis. They realize that it is important to find new solutions in order to live on now that the conditions have changed so completely. Johan Forsman and his father Jan have a large farm with 1500 ha of forest. For them, it is not just a financial loss, the extensive work to take care of the broken forest feels endless. It is difficult to get enough people to work. Some of the assistance is taken from other parts of the world, including Finnish forest workers. The problem is that the Finns only speak Finnish, and a little Russian…
Only twenty-five years ago, the first evidence of self-medicating behaviour among animals was reported among chimpanzees. On the basis of this pioneering research, led by the American Michael Huffman, a new science was founded: "zoopharmacognosy", or the study of animal pharmacopeia. Animals are apparently able to treat themselves actively, to detect natural substances that can provide a remedy for health problems, or to prevent them. The primatologist Michael Huffman explains how he discovered that chimpanzees can heal their diseases with medicinal plants from their environment. The scientist then comments on other very surprising examples: Birds that disinfect their nests by filling them with aromatic plants with repellent properties, a rodent that covers its coat with toxic sap as a poisonous defence against predators and elephants that place mud plasters on their injuries. Some therapeutic behaviours may even be transmitted socially among certain species.
A black-and-white visual meditation of wilderness and the elements. Wildlife filmmaker Richard Sidey returns to the triptych format for a cinematic experience like no other.
The BBC looks at our current weather and climate compared to the climate of our past to see if it really is changing...which it is and they explain science behind it
News from the troubled Korean peninsula comes frequently and often deals with the risks of new fighting between North and South Korea. But between the two there is a zone where the wild got a chance and where rare animals can live on in the shadow of all weapons.
In the Philippines, the reefs, coasts and islets of the island of Palawan, the Straits of Balabak and the Sula Sea are amongst the richest in biodiversity on Earth. Some scientists claim that the entire submarine wildlife of the Pacific originated from this area. The coral is magnificent and the protected sites offer an incomparable vision of marine life to scuba divers from all over the world. However, since the end of the Second World War, Philippine fishermen have been fishing with dynamite all over the coral reefs of this marine Wild West. Today, far from diminishing, this form of fishing has taken on industrial dimensions and 50% of the coral has been destroyed, turning this underwater Eden into arid desert…
Rottnest Island is one of the most remote and isolated places you can journey to on Earth. It’s also one of the only places you can meet a quokka. This is the story of a tiny island off the west coast of Australia that's become a global magnet for selfie tourism. All because of one very happy animal.
A group of artists settle in a swamp on the banks of the Indre River. Meanwhile, a voice describes a utopian world.
There is a fabulous colony of Greater Horseshoe Bats in the heart of the Camargue. This species of bat is one of the most amazing. A true little clown equipped with the very latest biological technologies, the Greater Horseshoe Bat is as rare as it is mysterious. "The life of a Greater Horseshoe Bat" invites you to share the life of a young female and her mother, for better or for worse...