Girl Haunts Boy 2024 - Movies (Oct 10th)
African Giants 2024 - Movies (Oct 10th)
Cold Meat 2023 - Movies (Oct 10th)
Zombie Town 2023 - Movies (Oct 10th)
Teaches of Peaches 2024 - Movies (Oct 10th)
Heightened 2023 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Sebastian 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Hounds of War 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Knox Goes Away 2023 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
A Quiet Place Day One 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Cabrini 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Caddo Lake 2024 - Movies (Oct 10th)
- (Jan 1st)
- (Jan 1st)
- (Jan 1st)
- (Jan 1st)
- (Jan 1st)
- (Jan 1st)
- (Jan 1st)
- (Jan 1st)
- (Jan 1st)
Life Below Zero - (Oct 10th)
The Great British Bake Off- An Extra Slice - (Oct 10th)
Yorkshire Great and Small with Dan and Helen - (Oct 10th)
Fifth Gear - (Oct 10th)
Taskmaster - (Oct 10th)
The Art of Film with Ian Nathan - (Oct 10th)
Married at First Sight UK - (Oct 10th)
All Creatures Great and Small - (Oct 10th)
Help We Bought A Village - (Oct 10th)
Andrea Mitchell Reports - (Oct 10th)
Katy Tur Reports - (Oct 10th)
Richard Osmans House of Games - (Oct 10th)
The Rebuild- Inside the Montreal Canadiens - (Oct 10th)
The View - (Oct 10th)
Art of the Surge - (Oct 10th)
20 Minutes - (Oct 10th)
Mark McKinney Needs a Hobby - (Oct 10th)
Lost Monster Files - (Oct 10th)
The Good Stuff with Mary Berg - (Oct 10th)
Great Australian Walks With Julia Zemiro - (Oct 10th)
This short documentary features a portrait of Ottawa in the mid-20th century, as the nascent Canadian capital grew with force but without direction. Street congestion, air pollution, and rail traffic were all the negative results of a city that had grown without being properly planned. French architect and urban designer Jacques Gréber stepped in to create a far-sighted plan for the future development of Ottawa. With tracks moved, factories relocated, and neighbourhoods redesigned as separate communities, Ottawa became the capital city of true beauty and dignity we know today.
This full-length documentary from the Challenge for Change program addresses housing issues affecting Montreal in the mid-1970s. As the city is restoring older apartments through direct action and government subsidies, new, low-rent housing is being integrated into old neighborhoods.
Writer and urban activist Jane Jacobs fights to save historic New York City during the ruthless redevelopment era of urban planner Robert Moses in the 1960s.
Caracas has been changing since the nineteenth century this is a story that tries to explain why the Venezuelan capital is complex, chaotic and fertile. In light of these new evidences, community experiments, social awareness and organization of people, seem to be the necessary ingredients to rescue a metropolis that is not yet completely lost.
Filmed at the Wing Fong Farm in Ontario, this documentary follows the tilling, planting and harvesting of Asian vegetables destined for Chinese markets and restaurants. On 80 acres of land, Lau King-Fai, her son and a half-dozen migrant Mexican workers care for the plants. For Yeung Kwan, her son, the farm represents personal and financial independence. For his mother, it is an oasis of peace. For the Mexican workers, it provides jobs that help support their children back home.
Just a stone’s throw from downtown Montreal is the largest social housing complex in Quebec. Built in 1959 where the red-light district used to be, Les Habitations Jeanne-Mance have retained something of the area’s seedy reputation for poverty, prostitution, drugs and violence. But who really knows the projects and the people who live there? Delving beneath the prejudices and stereotypes, director Isabelle Longtin ventured inside the buildings and met the residents.
The war zone of a dystopian multiplayer shooting game is used to embark some urban explorers on a winter walk, avoiding the combats whenever possible, as peaceful observers, inhabitants of a digital world, which is a detailed replica of Midtown Manhattan.
“A Short History of the Highrise” is an interactive documentary that explores the 2,500-year global history of vertical living and issues of social equality in an increasingly urbanized world. The centerpiece of the project is four short films. The first three (“Mud,” “Concrete” and “Glass”) draw on The New York Times's extraordinary visual archives, a repository of millions of photographs that have largely been unseen in decades. Each film is intended to evoke a chapter in a storybook, with rhyming narration and photographs brought to life with intricate animation. The fourth chapter (“Home”) comprises images submitted by the public. The interactive experience incorporates the films and, like a visual accordion, allows viewers to dig deeper into the project’s themes with additional archival materials, text and microgames.
A short documentary on the River Ouse, following it downstream from Lewes to Newhaven, meditating on the surrounding area.
Behind the scenes of a large construction site in western Switzerland, we dive into the world of construction where most of the workers are foreigners.