Heightened 2023 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Sebastian 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Hounds of War 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Knox Goes Away 2023 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
A Quiet Place Day One 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Cabrini 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Fortune Feimster Crushing It 2024 - Movies (Dec 3rd)
Bad Actor 2024 - Movies (Dec 3rd)
Weekend in Taipei 2024 - Movies (Dec 3rd)
Exhibiting Forgiveness 2024 - Movies (Dec 3rd)
Christmas Eve in Miller’s Point 2024 - Movies (Dec 3rd)
Ghosts of Red Ridge 2024 - Movies (Dec 3rd)
Operation Mistletoe 2024 - Movies (Dec 2nd)
Jack in Time for Christmas 2024 - Movies (Dec 2nd)
The Wild Robot 2024 - Movies (Dec 2nd)
BeBe Winans’ We Three Kings 2024 - Movies (Dec 2nd)
Mickey and the Very Many Christmases 2024 - Movies (Dec 2nd)
Last ExMas 2024 - Movies (Dec 2nd)
Heavier Trip 2024 - Movies (Dec 2nd)
The Christmas Quest 2024 - Movies (Dec 2nd)
The Finnish Line 2024 - Movies (Dec 2nd)
Tuttle Twins - (Dec 3rd)
The Bad Skin Clinic - (Dec 3rd)
Im a Celebrity... Unpacked - (Dec 3rd)
The Beat with Ari Melber - (Dec 3rd)
The Martin Lewis Money Show - (Dec 3rd)
Acting Good - (Dec 3rd)
Deadline- White House - (Dec 3rd)
James May and the Dull Men - (Dec 3rd)
Deal or No Deal - (Dec 3rd)
The One Show - (Dec 3rd)
The Bold and the Beautiful - (Dec 3rd)
The Talk - (Dec 3rd)
Sue Perkins Big Adventure- Paris to Istanbul - (Dec 3rd)
The Princes Master Crafters - (Dec 3rd)
QI - (Dec 3rd)
Katy Tur Reports - (Dec 3rd)
Inside with Jen Psaki - (Dec 3rd)
Four in a Bed - (Dec 3rd)
Homes Under the Hammer - (Dec 3rd)
Britain’s Most Evil Killers - (Dec 3rd)
An intimate portrait of one of the most loved footballers; Ronaldinho. This documentary looks at his childhood in Brazil, his breakthrough to professional football and his journey to Europe including the ground-breaking years with Barcelona. We hear from his family, teammates and peers in a truly heart-warming story of one of the games greats.
This documentary spotlights one of the most contentious deals in football history and the extraordinary player at the center of the storm: Luís Figo.
Henry Hills is among the film artists who, like filmmaker Abigail Child, marries frenetically fast image montage with split-second music and sound editing: the changes in rhythm and mood stream so fast they create a giddy delirium in the spectator. SOCIAL SKILLS provides Hills with the perfect subject: discontinuous fragments from a 60-day class in liberated body movement led by David Zambrano in Belgium. The soundtrack does the splits between disco funk and cartoon noise effects. Is it dance, childlike play, or the Utopian vision of a community of negotiated differences? It is all of these things at once.
A piece of story which has been taken from two young men from Rangkasbitung – it’s a small town which has a distance 120 kilometers from the capital city of Jakarta. Kiwong and Iron have a profession as a tofu sellers. Kiwong sells tofu in the economy train of Rangkasbitung to Jakarta while Iron sells the fresh tofu in the traditional Rangkasbitung market. Those characters are portraits of young generation from post Reformation in 1998 where Indonesia was a country which had been reigned by military regime before, and turn to be a large democratic country in the world.
A celebration of the life of actress Farrah Fawcett, an American icon whose influence on pop culture has been underestimated.
When the past re-emerges, it can prove to be uncontrollable and become another present, the here and now of a space that is contemporaneously clear-cut and indefinite, suspended within a frame of mind that can take your breath away. The movie is a journey inside this dimension, as it recounts what it means to cross this threshold and teeter between unexpected tears and sudden laughter. A reflection on old age and what you can discover by looking at yourself in this mirror, the film is the outcome of a long process of listening and dozens of lengthy encounters in five regions in Italy, in search of yesterday’s world, that sometimes seems very far away and sometimes strangely present.
Fabrizio Ferraro’s homage to Saint Sebastian, subject of three paintings by the Italian early Renaissance master Andrea Mantegna, starts in the present day with colorful images of tourists in the ancient ruins of the Palatino and the Foro Romano in Rome. Suddenly we are transported to another dimension, now in black and white, the same place but another time, suggesting the film’s inherent circularity.
Filmmaker Alain Resnais documents the atrocities behind the walls of Hitler's concentration camps.