Creating a Universe - The Making of Rebel Moon 2024 - Movies (May 2nd)
Justice League Crisis on Infinite Earths Part Two 2024 - Movies (May 2nd)
The Contestant 2023 - Movies (May 2nd)
Godzilla Minus One 2023 - Movies (May 2nd)
Boy Kills World 2023 - Movies (May 2nd)
Arcadian 2024 - Movies (May 1st)
Down the Rabbit Hole 2024 - Movies (May 1st)
A Million Days 2023 - Movies (May 1st)
Resurrected 2023 - Movies (May 1st)
This Never Happened 2024 - Movies (May 1st)
The Peasants 2023 - Movies (May 1st)
Sick Girl 2023 - Movies (Apr 30th)
The Portable Door 2023 - Movies (Apr 30th)
Great White Fight Club 2023 - Movies (Apr 30th)
Three Dates to Forever 2023 - Movies (Apr 30th)
Candid About Love 2023 - Movies (Apr 30th)
The Fall Guy 2024 - Movies (Apr 30th)
The Long Game 2023 - Movies (Apr 30th)
Cabrini 2024 - Movies (Apr 30th)
Madame Web 2024 - Movies (Apr 29th)
Honeymoonish 2024 - Movies (Apr 29th)
All Elite Wrestling- Dynamite - (May 2nd)
All In with Chris Hayes - (May 2nd)
Alex Wagner Tonight - (May 2nd)
The Last Word with Lawrence ODonnell - (May 2nd)
Survivor - (May 2nd)
The Masked Singer - (May 2nd)
Chicago P.D. - (May 2nd)
Murder in the Heartland - (May 2nd)
Supermarket Stakeout - (May 2nd)
We Were the Lucky Ones - (May 2nd)
Chucky - (May 2nd)
Chicago Med - (May 2nd)
The Conners - (May 2nd)
Take My Tumor - (May 2nd)
Chicago Fire - (May 2nd)
Race Across the World - (May 2nd)
Stacey Solomons Renovation Rescue - (May 2nd)
Walker - (May 2nd)
Ghost Adventures- House Calls - (May 2nd)
Abbott Elementary - (May 2nd)
Cactus Jack the most violent of Mick Foley's personalities invokes imagery of violence, bloodshed and sheer uninhabited brutality. He is a performer who went above and beyond the call of duty to achieve victory, leaving logic and sanity behind in order to accomplish his goals. When Cactus Jack competed, two things were guaranteed: all out Mayhem and a hospital ride for his unfortunate opponent. Whether Mick Foley was ripping apart arenas or engrossing fans with his one of a kind interviews, it was impossible to deny that there may never have been a performer who exemplified the hardcore, in your face style of Extreme Championship Wrestling. This is, for the first time anywhere, the complete story of Mick Foley's Extreme Experience.
A look at the raucous underground UK wrestling scene. We follow Grado, starry-eyed wrestling superfan turned semi-pro wrestler, as he gears up for the biggest night of his life: A title fight for Glasgow's hedonistic Insane Championship Wrestling belt.
Canadian Wrestling Elite is a burgeoning organization run by Danny "Hotshot" Duggan. See the action on their western Canada tour as he aims to make CWE a nationally touring company.
A retired Canadian professional wrestler from a very famous family recounts an amazing life in the ring and discovers an unexpected new family connection.
Lightbulbs, fire, barbed wire, mousetraps, staple guns, thumbtacks and glass are weapons of choice in The Backyard. This undercover documentary takes you deep into the controversial arena of backyard wrestling where the limits are constantly being tested...and broken. The Backyard follows several backyard wrestlers in different countries as they pursue their dream to become professional wrestlers.
The 70th anniversary of the birth of El Santo and the wrestling debut of his son mark the starting point for which El Hijo del Santo will take us into his story. His family history goes beyond the ring through personal memories and records, and brings us closer to his childhood with a father who had a double identity, to the discovery of the hero at home, and the reasons for wanting to continue this legacy.
It was before Hogan, before Ventura, and before charisma counted as much, perhaps moreso, as mat skills. It was 1977 in New York and Bruno’s run would soon come to an end. Enter The Superstar… Superstar Billy Graham burst onto the scene in the WWWF, unseated Bruno Sammartino, and rewrote the rulebook for pro wrestling heels. And now he wants you to join him on a journey to that pivotal year, where he’ll tell you everything that was happening within the walls of the largest wrestling federation in the world! We pick up the action in April of 1977, just before Graham gets the strap, and we follow the action into 1978, when Backlund takes it. The Sammartino title change…the McMahons…the ‘Wiz’…Japan…Backlund…the backroom dealings…missed opportunities…Albano’s antics…working the blade…the TV tapings… …all that and EVERYTHING that was happening in 1977/78 in WWE!!!
1980 in the WWF. Business isn’t so hot. Backlund isn’t drawing the houses they thought he would and business is moribund at best. That is, until a young Larry Zbyszko proposes an idea to his mentor that would change the course of the federation, and make the career of Zbyszko himself. This journey into 1980 is an incredible illustration of how Bruno Sammartino gave Larry Zbyszko the education of a lifetime in both the construction of the “Shea Stadium” program, as well as how to play the game of politics with the heavy hitters, like McMahon. No one saw the impact this angle would have on the gate at Shea, the direction of the company, the shadow it would cast on World Champion Backlund, and the heat and hatred Zbyszko would have to get used to living with. Relive the angle that re-ignited the biggest federation in the world…from the INSIDE…from the angle’s conception, to holding McMahon up for more money.
Atop the tag team division in the WWE in 1981 stood a fiery youngster and his brother figure, both of whom had the looks and the brawn to bring fans to their feet all over the Northeast. They slammed Moondogs, battled Samoans, and were high-flying champions full of excitement. Head back to 1981 with Rick Martel and enter the locker rooms walked by Vincent J. McMahon, Gorilla Monsoon, Capt Lou Albano and the legends of yesteryear. This may have been a simpler time in the business, but the lessons learned were hard, and so was the road. Come into the venues of yesteryear and see who was getting over and who wasn’t. This is the real deal…a time with no cable TV, no pay-per-view, and one hour of syndicated TV per week…and the arenas were packed.