Kinds of Kindness 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
Subservience 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
The Conqueror Hollywood Fallout 2023 - Movies (Oct 4th)
Joker Folie à Deux 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
Spin the Bottle 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
Things Will Be Different 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
The Radleys 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
Gods Not Dead In God We Trust 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
Little Bites 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
The Killers Game 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
One Person One Vote 2024 - Movies (Oct 3rd)
Aurora Teagarden Mysteries A Lesson in Murder 2024 - Movies (Oct 3rd)
Before Dawn 2024 - Movies (Oct 3rd)
Hells Half Acre 2023 - Movies (Oct 3rd)
House of Spoils 2024 - Movies (Oct 3rd)
Salems Lot 2024 - Movies (Oct 3rd)
Hold Your Breath 2024 - Movies (Oct 3rd)
Love on the Danube Kissing Stars 2024 - Movies (Oct 3rd)
G.O.A.T ~Greatest Of All Time~ 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
White Bird 2023 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
MaXXXine 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Cheap Irish Homes - (Oct 4th)
Deadline- White House - (Oct 5th)
The Beat with Ari Melber - (Oct 5th)
Richard Osmans House of Games - (Oct 4th)
The Talk - (Oct 4th)
The Bold and the Beautiful - (Oct 4th)
The Young and the Restless - (Oct 4th)
Lets Make a Deal - (Oct 4th)
Rust Valley Restorers - (Oct 4th)
Help We Bought A Village - (Oct 4th)
The Chase - (Oct 4th)
So Long, Marianne - (Oct 4th)
Katy Tur Reports - (Oct 4th)
Andrea Mitchell Reports - (Oct 4th)
Chris Jansing Reports - (Oct 4th)
The One Show - (Oct 4th)
Have I Got News for You - (Oct 4th)
Gutfeld - (Oct 4th)
Hannity - (Oct 4th)
Jesse Watters Primetime - (Oct 4th)
A vivid portrait of a generation of Hong Kongers committed to creating a new more democratic Hong Kong. Schoolboy Joshua Wong dedicates himself to stopping the introduction of National Education. Whilst former classmate Ma Jai fights against political oppression on the streets and in the courts. Catapulting the viewer on to the streets of Hong Kong and into the heart of the action. The viewer is confronted with Hong Kong's oppressive heat, stifling humidity and air thick with dissent. Filmed over 18 months this is a kaleidoscopic, visceral experience of their epic struggle.
Matthew Leung Ming-hong had been working as a breaking-news reporter for six years in Hong Kong but recently emigrated to the United Kingdom because of concerns about growing restrictions on journalists working in the city. Three Hong Kong media outlets popular with the opposition have folded in just six months, following the introduction of a controversial national security law in Hong Kong on June 30, 2020, raising fears about the future of press freedom in the city. The 29-year-old is starting a new life in Britain’s northern city of Manchester and plans to eventually resume his journalism career in Europe.
An anonymous, authentic video secretly filmed from taxi windows captures fragments of violence right in the middle of clashes between police and protesting Hong Kong residents. In addition to the contact sound of fights, screams, singing, chants of the slogan “Liberate Hong Kong! Revolution of our times!”, and the howls of those who've been beaten, we also hear the conflicting comments of taxi drivers from both sides of the border - Hong Kong and the neighboring mainland Shenzhen.
In 2017, twenty years after the British handed over Hong Kong to China in 1997, young people, more politicized than any previous generation and proud of their land, do not feel Chinese and actively fight against the oligarchs who want to subdue them to China's authoritarian power.
In 2019, Hong Kong was swept by demonstrations against the controversial extradition bill. At the Polytechnic University, a group of students also takes a stand for freedom and democracy. Negotiations with the police are chaotic and aggressive, conducted via megaphones and politically charged music played over loudspeakers. The colorful umbrellas which the young people use to protect themselves against the brutal police actions emphasize the group’s bravado, which borders on recklessness. What begins as an energetic battle against the establishment turns into a lopsided game of cat and mouse when the police decide to surround the building. Within its red brick walls, the university building becomes a prison. Over the nearly two weeks that follow, as fear and exhaustion grow among the hundreds of students, so does the uncertainty. Should they hang on inside, or leave the building to face the armed police?
The Real Story of Fake Democracy. Filmed over three years in five countries, FREEDOM FOR THE WOLF is an epic investigation into the new regime of illiberal democracy. From the young students of Hong Kong, to a rapper in post-Arab Spring Tunisia and the viral comedians of Bollywood, we discover how people from every corner of the globe are fighting the same struggle. They are fighting against elected leaders who trample on human rights, minorities, and their political opponents.
After a night of planning and mourning, a storm is brewing at early hours of 1 July, 2019. In face of the absurdity of the government's indoor flag ceremony, protesters question the usefulness of peaceful protest and hope to storm the Legislative Council Complex as a last-ditch effort to ignite change in the movement. As they confront pro-democracy councillors outside the complex, their pent-up anger and despair explode.
When the Chinese Communist Party backtracks on its promise of autonomy to Hong Kong, teenager Joshua Wong decides to save his city. Rallying thousands of kids to skip school and occupy the streets, Joshua becomes an unlikely leader in Hong Kong and one of China’s most notorious dissidents.
Although the Chinese government promised that Hong Kong would retain separate status until 2047, in recent years the Chinese state has consolidated its power over the metropolis. Large-scale protests by the populace have been brutally suppressed. This mix of documentary, fiction, and visions of the future reveals the current state of desolate depression among the people of Hong Kong. “A desperate attempt to capture the final moments of a sinking island”, as maker Chan Tze-woon himself puts it.
Hongkongers have been experiencing extremely difficult times due to the political movement caused by anti-Extradition Bill since the summer of 2019 followed by the COVID-19 pandemic. This film explores Hongkongers’ fear in various dimensions, be it a concept or actual physical experience, personal or political, private or public, or the mixing of these pairs.
Political engagement spawned the wildest of wonderlands for Hong Kong’s creativity – but as a new law annihilates freedom of expression overnight, underground artists and creatives find themselves targets, and their works disappeared. Together we race to preserve the creative uprising amid China’s crackdown.