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1-50 of 57
- Disturbing collection of 1940s and 1950s United States government-issued propaganda films designed to reassure Americans that the atomic bomb was not a threat to their safety.
- As the disaster of yet another school shooting hits, some parents are faced with a brutal fact: their child was the one pulling the trigger.
- The document approaches the efforts of the French feminist organization MLAC (Mouvement pour la liberté de l'avortement et de la contraception), which since 1973 fought for the decriminalization of abortion and contraception. Abortions were illegal in France until January 17, 1975, when changes were made under the pressure of activists. However, MLAC women continued to promote and practice unauthorized home births, artificial abortions, and spread information about contraception.
- The quest for the true personality of multi-talented cult artist and psycho-magician Alexandro Jodorowsky
- Denis has committed yet another crime. But instead of sending him to prison, the judge offers him an alternative : to work in a home for young psychotics. Denis accepts. At first, he feels bad in such an environment but, little by little, he finds that he can be useful to others. He also discovers who he really is.
- In the name of consumer freedom, the number of erotic fairs and video porn companies has increased with growing market economy.
- Since Russia was brought to its knees in the 1990s by crippling debt and the grip of the oligarchs following the collapse of the Soviet Union, Vladimir Putin has made it his mission to return superpower status to Russia. While not partisan to Putin's wrongs, this insightful doc examines the logic and motivations of Putin's vilified regime, and why he is so loved in his homeland.
- A few years ago, Jean-Marie, a young male homosexual drug-addict became Sandra, a tranvestite prostitute in Paris. Now she lives the everyday violence of prostitution, drugs and her recent confirmation of being seropositive. She has caught the AIDS virus through either a client or a needle... she will never know. Josée, her widowed mother, has left her tranquil life in retirement to stay with Sandra, to help her in her loneliness and despair and to try to make her beat her drug addiction. From the street and the hot quarters of Paris where hard drugs are available, to their cramped hotel room, they share the same daily nightmare that often leads them to despair.
- How did Putin gain such unbridled power and what is he willing to do to restore a Soviet-style Russia? This definitive 2007 film investigates the ominous political career of the ultra-authoritarian leader.
- A global picture of one century in the history of China, from the Opium War until the forthcoming appointment of Xi Jinping as President of the People's Republic, from the point of view of 100 Chinese citizens living and working in China.
- In a fishing village in southern Tunisia, Regaya, a beautiful young woman whose husband dies, refuses remarriage. Yet this is what a woman must do in Muslim society. Her father emigrated to distant France can only speak of his own suffering. She tries with her courage and her body to live her independence without breaking with her culture, her rituals and her traditions. With Fettah, the man whose thoughts she takes, she will try to live a new love away from all.
- Ukraine: From Democracy To Chaos.
- Most Somali men chew the Khat leaf, a natural amphetamine. And in Britain there is one man 90,000 chewers despise. This is the story of the Somali activist who virtually on his own, brought about the UK banning of the leaf. The doc charts the billion dollar global Khat industry, travelling to the heartlands of its production, the markets where hundreds of tons are sold daily and back to the campaign on the streets of London.
- The forced repatriation of Azorean migrants from the US has resulted in tragic consequences for the deportees and their families. Leaving the islands at a young age, and raised in the US, they remember little of the Azores upon their return. Separated from loved ones and barely speaking Portuguese, their struggle leaves them disconsolate. Lost in faraway memories, the deportees come to abide in an open sky prison of abandoned hopes.
- Deeply moved by his mother's agony, a young man tries to escape his pain by starting a relationship with another man. But life betrays him again and he has nothing left but his journey to hell.
- OR THE FIRST TIME I HEARD OF ISRAEL. A man recollects the conflict in the middle east through his personal memory. In this short documentary, Amiralay reflects on the first time he heard of Israel. Through recorded conversations with filmmaker Mohamed Malas, both Amiralay and Malas share their own unique stories and experiences about Israel and Israeli occupation. In the company of fellow Syrian filmmaker Mohammad Malas, the ground-breaking director Omar Amiralay revisits the ruins of the destroyed Golan village of Quneytra, occupied by Israel and then abandoned following the 1973 war.
- A vibrant tribute to Maurice Cullaz, nicknamed "Smoothie" by Louis Armstrong, who dedicated his life to defend all black music.
- Following a simple linear narrative, the film depicts children and adolescents, carefree or bitter, happy or disenchanted, living in the slums of the city of Roubaix, in the North of France.
- In commemoration of the 50th Anniversary of the WWII Liberation of Paris, high school students from the post-1968 politically active Lycée Rodin, working under the direction of historian and filmmaker Claudine Drame, document the liberation of the Drancy internment and transit camp which stood just 15 kilometers northeast of the city.
- Sumer, Babylon, the epic of Gilgamesh, the legendary Tower of Babel: all these names embody Mesopotamia. It is in this plain, also known as the "fertile crescent", where Iraq is today, that our civilization was born. There, humanity organized itself into a society of several tens of thousands of people, invented writing and gave agriculture and architecture an unprecedented development. What does this story tell, that a terrorist group decided to want to erase its trace for good? In 2014, Daech wiped the main archaeological sites of the North off the map. The images of the exactions went around the world and convinced Jawad Bashara, an Iraqi writer and journalist exiled in France under the dictatorship of Saddam Hussein, to return to his country to act.
- In their own words, Holocaust survivors Henri Borlant, Marcel Jabelot, and Violette Jacquet-Silberstein share their experiences of deportation and incarceration in concentration camps during World War II. Interviews conducted by Claudine Drame, Annette Wieviorka, Geneviève Decrop, and Régine Waintrater.
- A documentary about the creation of University Paris VIII in Vincennes, following the events of May 68.
- How can a teenager suddenly undergo such a complete transformation, tattooing his or her body, shaving the head bald and adopting the extreme views of the skinhead? This documentary follows the trajectories of a number of young skinheads in Switzerland, Poland and Denmark as they begin to play sinister games. It shows us one of the negative sides of today's world and the willful blindness of young people who embrace the cause of racism and violence, posing a threat to the state of equilibrium necessary for democratic government. It is an attempt to look at the world through the eyes of young neo-Nazi skinheads, inviting the viewer to reflect on a new generation that finds itself wrestling with the old demons.
- This short film, shot clandestinely during the war in Algeria, is made from drawings commented on by Algerian children collected in 1961 in a refugee camp in Tunisia.
- Fleury Mérogis, the largest women's jail in Europe. This program presents a portrait of seven inmates during their incarceration and follows them through their struggle for rehabilitation. A profound reflection on imprisonment.
- Robert Lechevalier restores magnificent old motorcycles in the back of the garage.
- "Child Prisoner" analyzes, in the form of fiction, the constraints experienced by a nine year old child in his daily life: family, media, environment, school where he learns to integrate the norm and the hierarchical system.
- Bertrand Bontoux, a visually impaired young opera singer has embraced a career in an environment where we can focus on him the most: the stage. Here are a few moments in the daily life of this blind artist: rehearsals, performances, etc.
- In 1980, five years after the war ended in Vietnam, one year after the conflict with China and the intervention in Cambodgia, how do peasants (the social majority) deal with life in the country? And the situation in the big cities?