Merry Birthday Happy Christmas 2024 - Movies (Nov 23rd)
Memoir of a Snail 2024 - Movies (Nov 23rd)
A Christmas Less Traveled 2024 - Movies (Nov 23rd)
Thelma 2024 - Movies (Nov 23rd)
Gladiator II 2024 - Movies (Nov 23rd)
Control 2023 - Movies (Nov 23rd)
OVERLORD The Sacred Kingdom 2024 - Movies (Nov 23rd)
A Quiet Place Day One 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Cabrini 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
I Used to Be Funny 2023 - Movies (Nov 23rd)
The Story of PlayStation 2023 - Movies (Nov 22nd)
Mobile Suit Gundam SEED FREEDOM 2024 - Movies (Nov 22nd)
Summer Rain 2024 - Movies (Nov 22nd)
Love Kills 2024 - Movies (Nov 22nd)
The Shade 2023 - Movies (Nov 22nd)
Clint Eastwood Make My Day 2023 - Movies (Nov 22nd)
Beyonce Limited Edition 2023 - Movies (Nov 22nd)
Out of My Mind 2024 - Movies (Nov 22nd)
Joy 2024 - Movies (Nov 22nd)
The Piano Lesson 2024 - Movies (Nov 22nd)
Spellbound 2024 - Movies (Nov 22nd)
James Martins Saturday Morning - (Nov 23rd)
Lucky - (Nov 23rd)
The Great Indian Kapil Show - (Nov 23rd)
WWE SmackDown - (Nov 23rd)
Football Focus - (Nov 23rd)
Shark Tank - (Nov 23rd)
The Ingraham Angle - (Nov 23rd)
Special Report with Bret Baier - (Nov 23rd)
Jesse Watters Primetime - (Nov 23rd)
The Five - (Nov 23rd)
Gutfeld - (Nov 23rd)
Hannity - (Nov 23rd)
Saturday Kitchen Live - (Nov 23rd)
The Kelly Clarkson Show - (Nov 23rd)
A View from the Terrace - (Nov 23rd)
The 11th Hour with Stephanie Ruhle - (Nov 23rd)
Life After Lockup - (Nov 23rd)
Someday at a Place in the Sun - (Nov 23rd)
Rip Off Britain - (Nov 23rd)
Cold Case Files - (Nov 23rd)
Namib, an incredible spot is home to the highest sand dunes on Earth, along with 3500 species of plants of incredible diversity, all adapted to the arid climate. Elephants, antelopes, lions, giraffes and rhinoceros roam freely in the Namib with neither fence nor enclosure, as if at the dawn of time. Management of the protected areas has been entrusted to the local people and in particular to the Himba, the dominant tribe of the desert. Underground there are hidden treasures, diamonds, uranium and iron. From the beginning of the 20th century the Namib has attracted miners from all over the world, with an increasing appetite. Today, new mining projects threaten the ecosystem of the region. Olivia crosses the desert from the South to North, sharing the difficult everyday lives of the people of the desert. Exploring this rich but fragile garden of Eden, she attempts to understand why the survival of the desert is so important to the people and animals that live there.
The Director Mohammed Soudani comes back to Algeria after 30 years with the photographer Michael von Graffenried to visit the Algerians he had photographed between 1991 and 2000 without them knowing it.
Africa. In the wild expanses, where bush-bucks, impalas, zebras, gnus and other creatures graze by the thousands, they are on holiday. German and Austrian hunting tourists drive through the bush, lie in wait, stalk their prey. They shoot, sob with excitement and pose before the animals they have bagged. A vacation movie about killing, a movie about human nature.
After the insurrection erupted in Libya in the spring of 2012, more than a million people flocked to neighboring Tunisia in search of a safe haven from the escalating violence. When a massive refugee camp was hastily constructed near the Ras Jdir border checkpoint in Tunisia, a trio of filmmakers carried their cameras in and began filming with no agenda. This on-the-fly chronicle of the camp's installation, operation, and dismantling captures a postmodern Babel complete with a multinational population of displaced folk, a regime of humanitarian aid workers, and international media that broadcasts its “image” to the world. Visually stunning and refreshingly undogmatic, Babylon reveals a rarely seen aspect of the Arab Spring.
Brussels, Béguinage church. Migrants organize a hunger strike to obtain papers. A man dies. Tunisia, Libya. A border camp of Choucha refugees tell the horror of crossing the Sahara to the north. Liège. In a refugee center, a man narrates his Mediterranean crossing in a chamber of air. Three moments of a battle for survival.
Ndola, Northern Rhodesia (currently Zambia), September 18th, 1961. Swedish Dag Hammarskjöld, UN Secretary-General, mysteriously dies in a plane crash. Decades later, Danish journalist and filmmaker Mads Brügger and Swedish researcher Göran Björkdahl investigate the case looking for a definitive closure.
A conversation between an older, HIV positive woman and her niece. The women talk about what it means to be a woman, mother, elderly and HIV positive in Lesotho. They speak about love, marriage, motherhood, inter-generational sex and health systems in the context of HIV in Lesotho.