Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-30 of 30
- To cover up his infidelities and protect his upcoming marriage, a star advertiser helps free an accused rapist by giving a false alibi and suffers the brutal revenge of the victim.
- Documentary about war photographer James Nachtwey, considered by many the greatest war photographer ever.
- A smokestack stubbornly pierces the sky. Trains rumble by down below. Lights come on in the buildings as night falls. There is a man behind the camera, looking for an image -- of himself? Of the world? Of society? By day and night, in rain and snow, he stands filming at the window of his studio. Periodically we hear people leaving messages on his answering machine. They talk about the weather while on vacation and congratulate him on his birthday. His father dies, a child is born, the young family begins to fall apart. Time passes. Slowly the cityscape morphs into the inner landscape of the man behind the camera.
- The film shows how the idea of a rescue station has evolved in the Nepali Himalayan region and what challenges the Zermatt-Nepal team faces today.
- How a world famous Swiss photographer died in the penguin empire of the Antarctica.
- A reality-check in Alaska's wilderness with Swiss emigrants Ruth and Yule Kilcher.
- This is the story of two children who are growing into teenagers and who encounter problems, pain, joy, new experiences, challenges and the responsibility of being a young adult.
- Investigate the erotic codes in interpersonal relationships. Sex being the hottest article in the mind of the media and probably the most exhausted and consumed service on the planet.
- The documentary gives unique insights into the life of the Women's Swiss National Team. It's about fulfilled dreams and disappointed hopes. 90 minutes full of emotions.
- Report of Sandra Blaser, a paramedic, for whom the emergency is part of everyday life. Day after day, night after night she is on her way to help the sick and injured to save lives.
- A documentary about two extra-ordinary Swiss men at an extraordinary cycle race in East Africa.
- The stone viaducts of Switzerland's world famous Rhaetian Railway were built around 1900. They are still in use today, serving the modern railway practically unchanged. In 2008, the Albula Line became a UNESCO World Heritage site. But after more than a hundred years in service, the viaducts are in need of renovation. Building Switzerland provides an insight into the country's most spectacular architectural and engineering feats in recent history. This 13-part video series looks inside architecturally important buildings, discovers hi-tech design, opulent and surprising living spaces and amazing bridges, and talks to the people who gave them life.
- A documentary feature tracing Swiss group The Young Gods' history from the beginnings in 1985 up until today.
- Summer 1812. Southeast of the Dead Sea Johann Ludwig Burckhardt discovers monumental tombs hewn into the red rocks and describes them in his travel diaries. They are parts of Petra, ancient capital of the Nabataeans, a mysterious nomadic people who settled more than 2000 years ago, building a flourishing city in the middle of the desert. Together with Swiss archaeologists Ueli Bellwald and Stephan Schmid, filmmaker Christian Walther retraces Burckhardt's journey.
- A Swiss alpine wrestler gets a crack at the national championship.
- In the middle of Colombia's humanitarian tragedy, a journalist fights to report and disclose the barbarity of the conflict.
- Mankind has landed on the moon and flies around in space. But under our feet there are about a million kilometers of cave systems-only one per cent of which has been explored. The 19-minute film accompanies experienced cave explorer and mountaineer Lea Odermatt on her tours beneath the surface of the earth, in claustrophobic passageways and gigantic caverns and chambers usually hidden from the majority of humanity.