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- In 19th century Central America, a few entrepreneurial cowboys built an empire that enslaved populations and corrupted governments for over 100 years. The United Fruit Company thrived on unregulated capitalism; this film tells its story and that of its pioneers who feared neither God nor Man, and managed to get away with murder.
- Based on archive material, the film reveals the final years of Israel's founder, David Ben-Gurion. Excluded from leadership, he allowed himself a hindsight perspective on the Zionist enterprise.
- Does mourning have a use-by date... like yogurts? And what exactly does the term "mourning" mean?
- Bastien is twenty years old and has been active for five years in the main French far-right party. When the presidential campaign begins, he is invited by his superior to commit even further. Initiated into the art of wearing the suit and tie of a politician, he starts to dream of a career, but old demons return to haunt him.
- Thirteen-year-old Nicolas lives in a foster home with his best friend, Saef. He enjoys many of the pleasures of childhood and sees his mother from time to time, but soon he will have to find his place.
- A documentary about how the most talented comic genius of all time Buster Keaton fell prey to the Hollywood Studio system machinery in 1930s which curbed his artistic freedom, leading to alcoholism and ultimately completely destroyed not only his career but also his life.
- The diary of Takuya Ogushi, a 18 years old Japanese, who begins his new life as a sumo wrestler.
- They are barely 20 years old and fighting the Islamic State in Syrian Kurdistan. In this part of the world where men walk in front and women behind, the fact that they have taken up arms alongside their brothers is of extraordinary significance. Their colorful scarves, their calmness and their courage have made the world go round. Against the backdrop of the flow of war images, Stéphane Breton films their daily life in a world in ruins, the waiting and the wakes of arms around the memories of the disappeared. These are the Kurdish fighters, the Daughters of Fire.
- The Arabian Peninsula is situated amid the most militarized zone on Earth. Here the countries of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Qatar have greatly expanded their geopolitical influence in an increasingly destabilized region.
- Covers the story of U.N. Kenyan peacekeepers in Bosnia.
- Uncompromising, multi-awarded actress, Simone Signoret told herself in 1976 in a book ("Nostalgia is no longer what it used to be"). She also answered with refreshing frankness to the thousand questions of journalists on subjects as varied as the profession of actor, her roles in the cinema, her conception of political commitment, the couple or the passing of time. Thirty-five years after her death in 1985, Michèle Dominici composed from archives, interviews and excerpts from her films the portrait of an actress who refused to be a star all her life, an activist who was never cast, an artist who made the choice of love and freedom.
- From September 2012 to May 2013, France avidly instigates the bill of marriage equality. During these nine months of legislative gestation, sociologist Irène Théry exposes what's at stake to her son. What comes out of it is a cinematic tale of teddy bears, toys, and cardboard shreds. An intimate portrait and national soap opera, this movie makes us revisit something we all thought we knew perfectly: family.
- Documentary on Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, legendary writer (Le Petit Prince is worldwide known and in the top 10 all time bestseller) and legendary aviator
- Being named after a fish (Brochet means pike in English) is no pleasure cruise. Anne Brochet, the unforgettable Roxane of "Cyrano de Bergerac", has always felt that bearing an animal's name makes one vulnerable. At any rate, it has always been a hard experience to be likened day after day to a sinister fish! What about the others in her case? How do they cope with their ordeal? To get an idea, Anne Brochet goes and meets Monsieur Cheval (Mr. Horse), Madame Lapin (Mrs. Rabbit), Mr. Le Renard (Mr. Fox) and their likes...
- Since the summer of 1994, in the Bay of Biscay, French and Spanish fishermen have been clashing. All the ingredients of globalization come together: the confrontation between traditional fishing techniques and unorthodox modern methods.
- A black and white film made with silver photographs, each contributing to tell a story.