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 2,732
- Long-running factual programme reporting on all aspects of life in Britain.
- This powerful investigation into Shia clerics in some of Iraq's holiest shrines uncovers a dark network of exploitation of young women and girls, trapped into prostitution and pimped out by a religious elite. Unprecedented undercover filming and victim testimony reveal how they procure young women for male clients and are prepared to conduct 'pleasure marriages' with children as young as ten years old. These halal pleasure marriages totally circumvent Iraq civil law, but are routinely ignored.
- Masha Drokova joins Nashi, a Russian ultra nationalist youth group, at the age of 16 and rapidly ascends its ranks, famously garnering a medal and the opportunity to kiss Vladimir Putin. The film details her growing disillusion with the group's leaders and her falling in with the anti-Putin opposition, especially a journalist and blogger named Oleg Kashin, who gets brutally attacked.
- This series uncovers key stories of women that have made and changed human history from 10,000 BCE to the present day.
- An excellent narration of oil industry since early days to 20th century and up to today. How oil changed the world and shaped our modern world today.
- The 72nd British Academy Film Awards (BAFTAs/British Academy of Film and Television Arts) were held on 10 February 2019 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, honoring the best films of 2018. Roma (2018) won the Best Film award and Best Director for Alfonso Cuarón. The Favourite (2018) won the Outstanding British Film award, Best Actress in a Leading Role for Olivia Colman and Best Actress in a Supporting Role for Rachel Weisz. Rami Malek won Best Actor in a Leading Role for Bohemian Rhapsody (2018) and Mahershala Ali won the Best Actor in a Supporting Role for Green Book (2018).
- Stamford Hill, London has been home to Europe's largest community of Hasidic Jews since the 1800s. Soaring rents have forced them to look for a new home in an unlikely location and with help from the unlikeliest of champions.
- A visual history of the significance and impact of the Pop Art movement in the Sixties and beyond.
- History of the Masons starting with Stone Masons and secrets of Construction, to becoming like the Boy Scouts for Men of making Men better Men.
- Discover how the traditional boarding school system has shaped a group of men first filmed 33 years ago in an elite boys school called Radley College.
- Live coverage of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle getting married at St George's Chapel in Windsor.
- The digital age has heralded a new unprecedented means of surveillance, and as more of our personal information goes online, more of our lives are subject to state-sponsored espionage. Governments with dubious human rights records are now using mass surveillance technology to thoroughly track and quell any murmurs of dissent - and it is western companies that are providing the technology to do so.
- Celebrates the protean genius of one of America's most prolific and original artists, Robert Rauschenberg. Fearless and influential, he blazed a trail for artists in the second half of the 20th century.
- Brenda Emmanus follows acclaimed artist Sonia Boyce as she leads a team preparing a new exhibition at Manchester Art Gallery, highlighting artists of African and Asian descent who have helped to shape the history of British art.
- British Muslim and journalist Myriam Francois discovers why the high street is increasingly targeting Muslim shoppers and if this is simply good business practice or pandering to an oppressive religious minority.
- The bombings in Sri Lanka on Easter Sunday 2019 were the deadliest violence in the country since its Civil War ended a decade ago. Father Francis Joseph, a Catholic priest was instrumental in facilitating the final surrender of hundreds of fighters and their families. But he was last seen in public the day the war ended. This film asks - What happened to Father Francis Joseph?
- The Democratic Republic of the Congo is a vast, mineral rich country the size of Western Europe. Alastair Leithead takes an epic journey from the Atlantic Ocean to the far reaches of the Congo river to explore how history has shaped the Congo of today and uncover the lesser told stories of this beautiful, if troubled country. In the largest rainforest outside of the Amazon he comes face to face with its gorillas and hunts with pygmies, he travels into the heart of the Ebola outbreak with United Nations peacekeepers, and explores the cobalt mines which will drive our electric cars of the future.
- An Iranian Kurd and political refugee in France goes to Iraq accompanied by Kojin, a 23-year-old gay friend, to confront his devout family, friends and other members of the Kurdish community with their prejudices on homosexuality.
- Asia's financial crisis in 1997-1998 saw many of the region's currencies slump, stock markets crash, banks fail, and a regime topple. What legacies have been carried forward?
- Influencers across the globe are promoting Apetamin as a quick fix for Kardashian-esque curves. But there's a lot they don't know about this 'miracle' syrup.
- With the government about to fire the starting gun for negotiations on Brexit, Laura Kuenssberg explores what's likely to be the biggest challenge the UK has faced since World War II.
- Exclusive behind-the-scenes access to legendary game creator Hideo Kojima's new studio, Newsbeat shows the making of Death Stranding - the first game from Kojima Productions in Tokyo.
- Bettany Hughes examines the story of the god of wine, revelry, theatre and excess. She visits Jordan, Georgia, Greece and Britain to discover his origins, modern presence and role in the development of civilisation.
- Katie Gornall travels to Jamaica to meet the fastest man in the world, Usain Bolt, fresh from his Rio 2016 Olympics success.
- Anita Anand tells the fascinating and largely unknown story of Princess Sophia Duleep Singh - descendant of Sikh royalty, goddaughter of Queen Victoria and pioneering suffragette.
- Julia's father was a sperm donor. This documentary follows Julia as she meets her fellow 'diblings' (donor fathered brothers and sisters) and looks into how both sides feel about meeting each other and what the future may hold. The documentary concludes with Julia and her mother having a face to face meeting with her donor father for the first time.
- In a Phnom Penh karaoke bar in 2009 Australian musician Julien Poulson hears the extraordinary voice of poor village girl Srey Thy. The result is romance and the birth of the Cambodian Space Project, a thrilling musical explosion that wows audiences worldwide with sounds from the 1960s and '70s golden age of Cambodian rock. Filmed over five years this intimate documentary tells the story of performers whose struggle to overcome poverty, trauma and obscurity has never been easy.
- One of the greatest directors in the history of cinema, Martin Scorsese has created masterpieces like Taxi Driver, Raging Bull and Mean Streets over five decades. Captured live in conversation at London's British Film Institute, film critic Nick James quizzes Scorsese on his obsessions with masculinity, religion, crime and New York.
- A documentary about the life of the man considered by many to be England's greatest ever footballer, 1966 World Cup winner Sir Bobby Charlton, to celebrate his 80th birthday.
- A pioneering team of tropical scientists, in search of new creatures and plants, get rare access to Brazil's highest and most isolated mountain, the Pico da Neblina meaning 'peak of mist'.
- What makes our lipstick glossy and our foundation smooth? A lot of the time it's palm oil. It's in 70% of beauty products - and some people say it should be banned.
- His election to presidency was the biggest political upset of a generation; four years on, Donald Trump's impact has been seismic.
- Ahead of the London 2017 World Athletics Championships, four-time Olympic champion Michael Johnson looks back to London 2012.
- The enduring relationship between Britain and people whose origins lie in Africa.