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- Gabrielle joined a prestigious news program. With no formal training, she must prove herself and find place among an experienced team of special correspondents.
- It follows the relationship between film icons Romy Schneider and Alain Delon.
- In the wake of Israel's 2006 bombardment of Lebanon, a determined woman finds her way into the country convincing a taxi cab driver to take a risky journey around the scarred region in search of her sister and her son.
- In an attempt to contain migratory flows, EU leaders have opted for a costly, double-edged policy of outsourcing. They have chosen to hand out millions of euros to countries on Europe's borders, in the hope that these neighbors will themselves contain the flow of migrants, thus relieving themselves of this thankless task. However, these measures do not seem to be having the desired effect, as the networks are now content to take ever more perilous routes. Another unexpected consequence is that Europe is exposed to potential blackmail by the countries it finances.
- A French documentary about one of the worlds biggest banks and its influence in everyday life.
- They've become the human face of inhuman barbarity. Leaders like Hitler, Idi Amin Dada, Stalin, Kim Jong Il, Saddam Hussein, Nicolae Ceausescu, Bokassa, Muammar Kadhafi, Khomeini, Mussolini and Franco governed their countries completely cut off from reality. These paranoid leaders were driven to abuse their power by the pathology of power itself.
- The script of "Back to the Future" was one of the most refused of Hollywood: more than forty times. No producer believed in this project of Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale. Steven Spielberg imposed the film on Universal Studios, with Gale signing the script and Zemeckis directing. The director of "Jaws" will not regret it. In 1985, "Back to the Future" pulverized the box office and became a worldwide success, reinforced by two sequels in 1989 and 1990. Decade after decade, the popularity of this trilogy does not falter. Why this longevity while so many blockbusters sink into oblivion?
- More than a billion people use Instagram. Over 100 million photos are posted every day. The app is a must on vacation or when visiting a restaurant. Soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo has 403 million followers, Kim Kardashian 260 million. But what does the network say about society and individuals? Instagram shapes life, standardizes tastes, questions economic certainties and changes the relationship to reality. When Instagram was released in 2010, the small photo-sharing app with the sophisticated filters initially only aroused interest in the young and trendy start-up scene in California. Only two years later, when Mark Zuckerberg bought it, the application developed into a platform for a new form of advertising and communication: influencer marketing. Whether it's a big brand or a simple craft business, whether a private individual or an international star: everyone is fighting for the attention of the community. Instagram has become a digital advertising pillar and a strategically important place. The app thus gave birth to a new profession: that of the influencer. The trendsetters set the tone in all areas, from fashion to tourism to gastronomy. Those who are particularly talented, cunning or popular can quickly achieve fame and fortune. But only a few achieve what many strive for. The unrestrained staging of one's own personality, which promises illusory happiness in the ocean of consumption, gradually influences people's lives. The flood of images turns into saturation, into a never-ending pornography of clothes, objects, food and muscular, suntanned, oiled bodies. Anyone who wants to stay hip conforms to the new aesthetic and cultural codes that are being disseminated via the app. Some undergo surgery to make their face or body fit the network's needs, and run the risk of being exposed to questionable surgeons. Some become mentally ill, others even lose their lives. The documentary film gets to the bottom of the Internet platform and the social development associated with it, which today poses a real threat to the psychological and emotional balance of the world population.
- The Shadow of Gold takes an unflinching look at how the world's favourite heavy metal is extracted from the earth. The film explores both sides of the industry: the big-time mining companies that dig deep and lop off mountaintops to extract gold from low-grade ore, and the small-time miners - an estimated 20 million people in the world's poorest nations - who extract gold by hand, often producing just enough to survive.
- For 192 days, Thomas Pesquet filmed his journey in space. He he lived in the ISS (International Space Station) with 5 other astronauts. From this extraterrestrial journey, the 39-year-old French astronaut brings back extraordinary images. Earth, seen from space The images of the earth scroll then, fascinating, despite this observation of the astronaut on pollution and deforestation. He had read the damage before, he now sees it from the ISS. He feels the fragility of the Earth. His weightless images on a soundtrack of quality provoke a surge of beauty, of strangeness, in this slowness propitious to poetry. And the reading of the texts of the two winners of "Le Petit Prince" writing contest, visiting an eighth planet, takes on a whole new dimension in this beautiful production by Julien Adam and Matthieu Besnard produced by Capa Presse TV.
- When Jim Morrison mourned the world - but the cause of death remains shrouded in obscurity. Was it a heart attack? An overdose? A CIA operation? Through exclusive interviews, the truth about the artist's mysterious death is now revealed.
- From the cameras in Nice to the Chinese repression of the Uyghurs, this survey draws up a global panorama of the security obsession, with one chilling observation: digital totalitarianism is for tomorrow.
- It follows soldiers, politicians, and experts speaking about the Russian offensive.
- Today, more than half the world's population lives in cities. These large, sprawling melting pots expose a society's identity and culture for all to see. What makes these gigantic urban centres go round? Why do millions of people dream of living in them? What give these megacities their soul? These are the questions that Alexandra Leroux will ask in her exploration of the world's megalopolises.
- It is one of the West's most powerful myths. The story of how the American West was won - by great heroes and white men. BLACK WEST tells the flip side of that myth. In 1875, one of four American cowboys was Black - Black sheriffs, Black trappers and Black soldiers. Some were adopted by Native American tribes, while others became slaves. These anonymous heroes were the inspiration for many great Westerns; yet Hollywood has erased them from the silver screen. Pieced together from archives, carefully crafted re-enactments and first-hand historical accounts, BLACK WEST restores these invisible heroes to their rightful place in history.
- reviewing a year on which the guest was 12 years old, and checking today's kids reactions about an iconic show and item of the same year.
- This investigation explores the origins and consequences of the EHPAD crisis, from France to Spain, via the UK and Germany. Individual stories highlight the financial exploitation, lack of regulation and devastating consequences for the elderly and their families. As a counterpoint, the Scandinavian model offers a glimmer of hope, illustrating a more humanistic and sustainable approach. The film encourages us to rethink our relationship with old age, and suggests ways of building a more respectful and supportive future for the elderly.
- Food waste is a global problem of increasing magnitude. This documentary outlines the severity of the issue, and shows various solutions implemented by people and companies around the world.
- Manon Loizeau and Alexis Marant investigated a new kind of haemorrhage, a discrimination so violent that it leads to an unnatural selection, worse, murder.