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
1-40 of 40
- In this epic special, travel back in time 25 million years to experience the trials, dramas and triumphs that shaped our ancestors.
- The story of the fall of the world's most glorious monarchy.
- Robert De Niro is famous for his award-winning portrayals of gangsters, criminals and socially disturbed men who show surprising traces of vulnerability. By analyzing his astonishing roles in iconic films through the years, the documentary reveal the complex actor behind these extreme characters. Because the public knows little about the man who is largely silent about his own life and emotions, this film tries to unwraps one of the most fascinating and enigmatic American actors of all time for the audience. For this the filmakers use clips from his feature films, archive footage of his sparse interviews and probe into his background to illustrate De Niro's methods for becoming the characters he plays and the reasons he's able to do so. All of this culminates in a rare exposé of the genesis of the hidden pain that enables the masterful actor to bring such intensity to the big screen.
- 1942. She was Jewish. He was Catholic. Annette and Jean wanted to get married, but Jean's parents were opposed. Annette Zelman was reported to the Gestapo by her fiancé's father and was sent to Auschwitz.
- Alfred Hitchcock is known as a giant of movie making, a facetious master of suspense, obsessed with blond heroines in peril, with the reputation of being tyrannical towards his actors. But who knows the real Hitchcock? During his last public appearance, "Hitch" paid tribute to the wife, mother, co-writer, editor and partner of a lifetime that was Alma Reville Hitchcock. The two Hitchcock were inseparable, engineering the unquestionable masterpieces together. Their genuine collaboration never stopped from the day they met until the end of their lives. It's in light of this fusional relationship that this film will revisit and shed fresh light on the legend.
- In June 1944 the Allies invade German-occupied France in Normandy. On its way to the battle the infamous, veteran 2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich commits all manner of atrocities on the French civilian population.
- Amos Gitai returns to the West Bank to better understand the efforts of the citizens, both Israelis and Palestinians, to try to overcome the consequences of the 50-year occupation. Interspersing footage of his interviews with Yitzhak Rabin from the 1990s with the contemporary interviews of everyday citizens.
- By 2030, it is estimated that half of the planet will be obese or overweight, leading to an explosion of diabetes, cardiovascular diseases and certain cancers. How can we explain this global epidemic, which no country has yet managed to curb? While obesity carries its own set of clichés, from all-powerful genes to failing individual wills, and while industrialists and public authorities continue to point the finger at the lack of physical activity, could this scourge not be the result of a collective failure cooked up on our plates? At the end of the 1970s, the fight against fat, designated as responsible for cardiovascular diseases, made cereals, rich in carbohydrates and massively subsidized, the new basis of our diet.
- This series offers both a romantic, epic and spectacular fresco of the period as well as also a fresh plunge into the heart of French society.
- How do we live Islam in France? In two parts, an unpublished picture of French Muslims, far from the fantasies of an irrational debate.
- The heroine of this film is immortal. She is over 2600 years old. This is the self-portrait of the oldest city in France. A city whose landscapes bear the scars of a destiny that has spared it no trials. Gateway to the Orient, crossroads of trade and immigration, Marseille is a mosaic with 111 districts and 200 nationalities. Rebellious, chaotic, in turn desired, torn apart, transformed, it is reborn each time from its ashes. Marseille tells us more about the history of France and sheds light on what France is today.
- This series offers both a romantic, epic and spectacular fresco of the period as well as also a fresh plunge into the heart of French society.
- Fifty years after the Independence of Algeria, the civil war 1954-62 is still a unknown subject for many people. This documentary brings along facts and data to understand why such events were a big trauma for both communities and by the way, explains the reason for the return to the power of the General de Gaulle (set up of a French constitution in 1958).
- The day that a baby is born is not the first day of its life. Through gripping 3D reconstructions, this documentary shows the nine months that are unseen, yet that determine the essential elements of each human being.
- An exclusive behind-the-scenes look at the Elysée Palace, seen through the prism of the solitude of being President of the French Republic.
- In the old prison of Pont-L'évêque there is a feast: people disguised as policemen, wardens, judges and prisoners show the life of the "happy" prison.There is now a visit of the prison.And surprise the female guide finds a hanged man, the judge Daniel.Among the the visitors the police commander Frank Roussel and his brother the police captain Julin Roussel: both will work together in this investigation.They meet Marion, the former female clerk who worked with the judge Daniel,she explains them that the judge was a solitary man living with his mother.The female medical examiner explains that the judge Daniel receive a strong punch in the head ,then he has been hanged with a silk scarf.