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
1-50 of 56
- Former United Nations employee Gerry Lane traverses the world in a race against time to stop a zombie pandemic that is toppling armies and governments and threatens to destroy humanity itself.
- Allied soldiers from Belgium, the British Commonwealth and Empire, and France are surrounded by the German Army and evacuated during a fierce battle in World War II.
- The everyday lives of working-class inhabitants of Albert Square, a traditional Victorian square of terrace houses surrounding a park in the East End of London's Walford borough. The square includes the Queen Vic pub and a street market.
- Fanny, born into a poor family, is sent away to live with wealthy uncle Sir Thomas, his wife and their four children, where she'll be brought up for a proper introduction to society.
- An orphaned girl discovers a magical garden hidden at her strict uncle's estate.
- Bathsheba Everdene, a willful, flirtatious young woman, unexpectedly inherits a large farm and is romantically pursued by three very different men.
- Drama based on the attempt by the RAF to destroy six dams in Germany during World War II.
- Two youngsters declare to their parents that they want to get married as soon as possible.
- Biographical movie of the French sculptor Henri Gaudier-Brzeska.
- An American tourist, a youth gang leader, and his troubled sister find themselves trapped in a top secret government facility experimenting on children.
- Ann and Joanna, a mother-daughter duo, run a hotel on an island. When they receive an unexpected guest, Joe, who had an affair with Ann years ago, Joanna express her feelings for him.
- In post-nuclear-holocaust England, a handful of bizarre characters struggles on with their lives in the ruins, among endless heaps of ash, piles of broken crockery and brick, muddy plains, and heaps of dentures and old boots. Patriotically singing "God Save Mrs. Ethel Shroake, Long Live Mrs. Ethel Shroake", they wander through this surrealistic landscape, forever being warned by the police to "keep moving", and prone to the occasional mutation into a parrot, cupboard, or even--yes, a bed-sitting room with "No Wogs" scrawled in the grime on its windows. In particular, this story revolves around the odd "love story" of a girl who lives with her parents in one compartment of a London Underground train, the commuter in the next compartment, and the doctor they meet after returning above ground in search of a nurse for the heavily-pregnant girl.
- A troubled family's problems come to a head during a stay in a seaside town.
- Sgt. Cannon (Tommy Cannon) and PC Ball (Bobby Ball) run the police station in the quiet town of Little Botham. When the station's threatened to be shut down, due to a lack of crime, they decide to invent some crimes to justify their existence. When they try to steal a painting from a local rich businessman (Roy Kinnear), they accidently stumble across a gang of real art thieves who have just stolen £1 million worth of paintings. It is up to the two bungling cops to stop them escaping with their haul.
- Bill and Robin, helped by their childhood friend, Lena, develop a "reproducer" which can exactly duplicate any object. Bill, crushed when Lena marries Robin, convinces her to allow him to duplicate her, so that he may have a copy of her for himself. The experiment, at first deemed a success, seems to have worked only too well as the duplicate, Helen, is such an exact copy that she also loves Robin, not Bill. Bill hopes to rectify the situation with another radical experiment.
- A young man runs away to sea but finds more adventures than he was expecting.
- Single mum Annie meets Mack and the two start a relationship sometimes hindered by Annie's devotion to her son, Charlie. The relationship reaches breaking point when Patrick lands a job in New York and asks Annie and Charlie to join him.
- A homeless man, Rich, returns to his homely shelter one day to discover another man asleep in his sleeping bag. He decides to confront him.
- The opening scene is in Elsinore, where a ghost is seen by the sentinels keeping guard on the battlements of the castle. This is related to Hamlet by his friend Horatio, who describes the spirit as much resembling the late King of Denmark, his deceased father, whom his Uncle Claudius is suspected to have murdered in order that the latter might usurp his throne. Uncle Claudius also married the queen, the mother of Hamlet, within a month after. Hamlet, moved by the narration of Horatio, determines to watch for the next appearance of the ghost. It is seen again at midnight, discloses itself to Hamlet as his murdered parent and relates to him the cruel circumstances of his cruel murder by the king, his uncle, and calls upon Hamlet to avenge it. In order to accomplish this purpose, Hamlet feigns madness, especially in his conduct towards Ophelia, daughter of Polonius, with whom he is enamored. Hamlet engages some players who enact a scene in the presence of the king and queen which displays the murder of his father, purposely to try the king. Claudius, on beholding this, stung by his conscious guilt and fearful of some outward event, determines to rid himself of his nephew by sending him to England. This project is aided by Hamlet, killing Polonius. whom he mistakes for the king and who was concealed behind the arras to listen to the conversation between the queen and her son, who had demanded an interview, Hamlet is by an accident made prisoner by some pirates as he is on his way to England but escapes and unexpectedly returns to Denmark. Previously, he discovers that the ambassadors are instructed by the king's letters to cause him to be put to death on his arrival in England. These letters he exchanges for others containing the same directions for the deaths of the ambassadors. During his absence, Ophelia, distracted through her father's death and her own misfortune, destroys herself, and her brother, Laertes, urged by false rumors concerning his father's demise, rebels against the king, but he abandons his intention on being told that Hamlet committed the deed. A stratagem is evolved by the king in which Laertes basely consents to kill Hamlet by secret means. Claudius wagers six Barbary horses against six French swords with Laertes that in a dozen passes he does not exceed Hamlet by three. Hamlet consents to make a trial and is first wounded by Laertes, who has treacherously used a poisoned weapon. In a scuffle they change swords and Laertes is himself wounded by the same deadly rapier. The king had prepared a poisoned chalice with which he determined to end Hamlet if Laertes failed. In the contents of this, the queen, unconscious that it is drugged, pledges Hamlet and is poisoned. Laertes, in the agony of death, confesses his own perfidy and accuses the king, and Hamlet, with the sword of Laertes, revenges himself by stabbing Claudius. The film concludes with the news of the death of Rosencrantz and Guilderstern through letters forged by Hamlet, and a eulogium oh the unfortunate prince by his friend Horatio and the choice of young Fortinbras for King of Denmark.
- Filmmaker Robb Leech is desperate to understand his stepbrother Rich's transition from middle-class white boy, to convicted terrorist.
- Before The Mast - Buccaneers
- Three show business personalities visit South Coast resorts and explore their surroundings.
- This short documentary combines observational and interview techniques with fantasy reconstruction to bring nostalgia and humor to its audience via a Primary school setting. A day in the life of a year 2 class is brought to light through unique visuals, entering a child's Universe their thoughts dreams and friendships capturing a sense of time which most of us have forgotten.
- A boy takes a journey into his memories, or is it his fantasy?
- We open the door on the secretive world of the Projectionist and see what can drive dedicated employee's over the edge.
- This is the story of how Weymouth, an important harbour since the 14th Century, became one of the most popular seaside resorts in the country. Historic photographs and illustrations blend with stunning modern film to create a fascinating portrayal of this much-loved Dorset town. Weymouth's story has a macabre edge to it: in 1348 the dreaded bubonic plague, known today as the Black Death, entered the country when an infected sailor stepped ashore on the harbourside. In 1588, as England defended her shores against the Spanish Armada, the San Salvador was captured off Portland and gleefully looted by the locals. Weymouth's popularity as a seaside resort was enhanced dramatically from 1789 onwards, when King George III frequently visited to bathe in the gentle waters of the bay. You will also re-live the history of Osmington's famous White Horse, the Roman Villa at Preston and the airfield that once stood on the nature reserve at Lodmoor. Weymouth suffered greatly in World War II, as devastating air raids destroyed much of the Chapelhay district, yet the town went on to play a key role in the path to final victory. In 1944 many thousands of American troops embarked from the harbour for the D-Day landings on the Normandy beaches.
- A Short Comedy Mockumentary following Lollipop-man Malcolm Godstick as he attempts to save his job from the government.
- In the home of a normal couple. However there is something not quite right.
- A documentary following a group of local people who embrace the Olympics by wading into the sea with their own torches.
- The Butterfly Foundation and Kieran Sheehan presents THE COPE PROJECT. Exploring Movement and Imagination as part of the healing process.
- A teenager, obsessed with a girl who he has never met, gets the opportunity to connect with her. Will Ezra's fantasies become a reality? Or will his dreams crumble?
- A violent girl is dumped sending her spiraling out of control.
- Worried for his son, director Jes Benstock goes on a quest to the darkest corners of his family tree - armed only with a videophone his dad and a therapist.
- The Doctor takes Ace to an old 'haunted' house called Gabriel Chase in the year 1883, 100 years before events that took place within that very house in her personal past.
- The Doctor manages to rescue Ace from the husks and then tries to uncover the truth about the goings on in Josiah's house.
- The Doctor attempts to convince Light to put an end to Smith's schemes but instead Light aims to put an end to Earth's evolution.
- Buchan has been duped. The teenagers must find out how Caine plans to move the stolen gold.
- Caine snatches the gold from under the noses of the Dutch police. Buchan follows him to Amsterdam while Sue and Mike take part in a yacht race.
- The backstreets of Weymouth seem an unlikely spot to explore railway history, but as Julia Bradbury discovers, there was once a short railway that ran south from Weymouth and across the unique coastal features of Chesil Beach and Portland. The walk is the ideal platform for learning about the history of Portland Harbour and the tied isle's most famous export: Portland Stone.
- Three of the team investigate The Ridgeway, piecing together many past finds by other people. Alex walks and camps, Tony uses a vehicle and hotels and Phil adds an expert's view of stone tools.
- Hardy is annoyed when being questioned about Ashworth's return. Claire disobeys Hardy's instructions not to see Ashworth. A former Broadchurch resident returns.