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- A young American and his English wife come to rural England and face increasingly vicious local harassment.
- Paranormal investigations into haunted locations, using psychic mediums and scientific equipment.
- Follows the adventures of a group of animals on wheels as they explore their jungle home. The series intends to instill an early respect for the environment in preschool age children.
- Drama miniseries about the friendship between Judith Dunbar and Loveday Carey-Lewis, before, during and after WW2.
- Introducing clinical and dependable DS Charles Wycliffe (Jack Shepherd), a Cornwall detective determined to crack the murder of a bookshop clerk and find the truth behind the dead man's family secrets.
- Maud Penmar Castallack wages war on her cousin Giles for many years in her determination to secure Penmarric for her son, Mark. But Mark is a man of passion and is beholden to his own desires, being torn between two women.
- A negligent father makes an unwelcome appearance at his 9-year-old son's funeral and steals the coffin.
- The foundation of the open-air Minack Theatre in Porthcurno, Cornwall, UK, and the story of Rowena Cade's vision and toil.
- Thee story of a broken family on their annual holiday to a bleak, lifeless, out-of-season Cornwall.
- Newly released from prison, Jack searches in vengeance for the girl who put him there.
- Told in flashbacks and present day, Jack has been released from prison after his girlfriend Becky shopped him to the police during a set-up. Jack's soliciter warns that he must stay clean, keep out of trouble and keep away from his girlfriend. But he has mixed emotions, Becky and Jack had very strong feelings for each other. Ignoring the advice he pursues her and hounds her and eventually catches up with her on some deserted dunes with a loaded gun.
- A stark, lyrical portrayal of a family at Christmas, orchestrated by the ebb and flow of clinging and abandonment. Happy Christmas is an interwoven seaside hymn to gift wrapped promises and unwanted presence. It's Christmas Eve in West Cornwall and Maggie is hoping to gather her disparate family under one roof for the first time in several years. Her youngest child, Carl, reluctantly leaves his life in the city and journeys back to the seaside town he once called home, daunted by the prospect of revisiting a troubled past. Meanwhile, Carl's brother Andy, dressed as Father Christmas, sets off on foot to confront his ex-wife Hana, and deliver a bin-bag full of presents to his estranged children. Their sister, Penny, nervously awaits the arrival of her teenage daughter Sophie, whos being driven home from college by her dad, Pennys first love, Graham. The streets are filled with carol singers and last-minute shoppers as Carl departs his train. A chance meeting with a stranger in the station café provides him with a possible alternative to the family reunion. Andy struggles to suppress his anger when he is denied entry to Hana's house and with it the opportunity to see his kids. Penny is feeling pressured by her partner David's proposal as Graham and Sophie make their way westward, attempting to repair their fractured relationship along the way. Against all of this, and as the town swells with festive fervour, Maggie comes to terms with a devastating discovery by embarking on a solitary pilgrimage across a desolate landscape to deliver some gifts of her own.
- A summer of drama for the UK. Joe McFadden takes a journey; 'A journey into lives past and future'. Cornwall's rugged ancient and modern landscapes, provide the dramatic backdrop for this energetic monologue.
- The plot revolves around two guys, Alex and Aidan, who go on holiday to Cornwall, staying in Alex's Uncle's pub. They anticipate two weeks of indulgence of the senses. They want women and beer. This illusion is partially destroyed when, on arrival, they discover that they are to work slavishly for Alex's Uncle. The illusion is shattered, however, when they realise that indulgence of the senses is not an easy process. Their attempts to attract females disintegrate into embarrassing farce. Even the accepted norms of a seaside holiday, such as sun and sea, slip through their fingers with astonishing regularity. Beneath the comic events and the pacy dialogue, is a more profound discussion on the fragility of fidelity and the loss of direction many of us feel during our early twenties, when we realise that after years of struggling for independence and freedom, we aren't quite sure what happens next.
- An observationally Cornish documentary, SouthWest End follow the amateur Rough Coast Theatre Company of St. Ives, Cornwall as they fight to get their new play onto the grounds of the world famous Minack Theatre.
- Mugsey learns that Chelsea is coming out of prison.
- Short magical realist film. After inheriting their parents bar, the cracks in Alice and Belle's fragile relationship begin to appear. The pressure starts to become too much for Alice, whose jealously and obsession takes a dark turn.
- An interview with production designer Chris Thompson about his work on the Doctor Who (1963) story "The Evil of the Daleks" (1967).
- Howard is a well known photographer who has dedicated his life to documenting life in Cornwall through his photographs. Now he is reaching the end of his life and attempting to sort through his notes and photographs kept at his house to compile a book. His family have separated from him due to his difficult nature, so when his niece, Charlotte, gets in trouble at home she is sent to help Howard as punishment. She calls round after school each week and gradually begins to take an interest in photography. He nurtures this interest and asks her to take one final photograph.
- Mugsey takes a trip to the Penzance Massive.
- Bus Stories follows filmmaker Simeon Costello as he travels from John O'Groats in Scotland to Land's End in Cornwall using only local buses investigating why public transport is crucial to the UK.
- A short documentary about the towns, places and people that may be found around Cornwall.
- A young woman meets her grandfather for the first time after her mothers death. She soon finds out that there is a family mystery to solve.
- On holiday with her aunt in Cornwall, spineless Virginia fell in love with Eustace, but left him for a loveless marriage, arranged by their parents to Scottish landed gentleman Anthony Keile. Only after Anthony's fatal car accident, she properly reads the nuptial terms, which allow Lady Keile to deny her any income from the estate at will, and she wants to raise Anthony's two kids, who so far were left in a nanny's care. Virginia still experiments with actual motherhood, taking them on a Cornwall holiday, meeting Eustace again.
- After three years in Paris, Emma returns to her father Ben Litton in Cornwall. He's a quite successful painter, but no less egocentric. He doesn't welcome her very warmly, and not even a week after her arrival, he leaves for an exhibition in USA. Emma, without much of a life of her own, stays back lonely. But there's also gallery owner Robert, who's fallen in love with her, and tries to win her heart and give her more self-confidence.
- Alec and Laura got married.Suddenly Laura falls sick and Alec proposes her to rest for some days at Eve and Gerald's house in Cornwall during his stay for business in New York.
- James Parry enjoys running a Cornish inn, albeit in financial trouble. Marital happiness is disturbed when his wife Ellen regrets having given up her painting restoration career for the household after daughter Vanessa decides to go study in London. Ellen's cousin Bridget Sanderford offers Vanessa the use of her London home, leaving after her partnership broke down to return to her parental home in the same Cornish town. Bridget rekindles romantic ties with James, he chose Ellen over her due to pregnancy. Ellen and her first new client, local aristocrat Sir Peter Salvage, also head for an affair.
- 1986–198851mTV-PG8.1 (927)TV EpisodeWhile convalescing in Cornwall, a depressive Holmes investigates the apparent death from apoplexy of a local woman and the unexplained sudden dementia of her two brothers.
- Morna Petheric runs over and kills Dinah Curran, insisting that Dinah was a ghost come back to haunt her. The pathologist notes that Dinah bore stab wounds from years earlier and Morna believes she killed her when she was a little girl. Dinah was once married to Morna's uncle and her infidelity with Morna's father caused somebody, not necessarily Morna, to take drastic action, as Morna's mother is forced to confess. Superintendant Le Page returns. Her report fully exonerates Doug Kersey but criticizes D.C.C. Stevens for bad management.
- Pike is convinced that the Doctor knows the location of Avery's treasure while Polly and Ben try to convince the locals they were not responsible for Longfoot's murder.
- Polly and Ben are placed in the custody of Blake, who reveals he also has his suspicions about the Squire, while the Doctor and Kewper are forced to team up to escape from Pike's ship.
- The Doctor and his friends are at the mercy of Cherub, who is now seeking Avery's treasure for himself, while Pike prepares to attack the village.
- A behind-the-scenes look at the lives of the UK's best MuayThai fighters.
- Tina Nash investigates 'Clare's Law', a new pilot scheme in which men and women are warned by the authorities about their partners' history of violence.
- 2007– 10mTV EpisodeIt's the first NON-Official video, as it's a bonus one from Geoff. Expect roughly one bonus video a week here on Geoff's channel, whilst getting the official four-a-week videos on the main 'All The Stations' channel.
- Josh finds treasure from the greatest score in pirate history; the most feared pirate of his time, Henry Avery stole a fortune worth more than $100 million today; Josh leaps into the frigid North Atlantic to recover Avery's riches.
- Railways changed what people ate in Britain and their culinary tastes. The speedy transport of fresh milk, fruit and veg, wet fish and fresh meat improved the range and quality of foods available to people - particularly in the big cities.