Queer 2024 - Movies (Mar 16th)
The Glassworker 2024 - Movies (Mar 15th)
Niko Beyond the Northern Lights 2024 - Movies (Mar 15th)
Die Alone 2024 - Movies (Mar 15th)
Joe Crist 2024 - Movies (Mar 15th)
Bagman 2024 - Movies (Mar 15th)
Mystery Island Winner Takes All 2025 - Movies (Mar 14th)
Racing Mister Fahrenheit 2024 - Movies (Mar 14th)
The Quiet Girl 2024 - Movies (Mar 14th)
Warden 2025 - Movies (Mar 14th)
The Electric State 2025 - Movies (Mar 14th)
Borderline 2025 - Movies (Mar 14th)
Bill Burr Drop Dead Years 2025 - Movies (Mar 14th)
High Rollers 2025 - Movies (Mar 14th)
Anthony Rodia Totally Relatable 2024 - Movies (Mar 13th)
Mickey 17 2025 - Movies (Mar 13th)
Silent Zone 2025 - Movies (Mar 13th)
The Parenting 2025 - Movies (Mar 13th)
Control Freak 2025 - Movies (Mar 13th)
Fierce Killer Marsupial 2024 - Movies (Mar 12th)
Goldilocks and the Two Bears 2024 - Movies (Mar 12th)
The Beat with Ari Melber - (Mar 15th)
The Last American Vagabond - (Mar 15th)
Our Dream Farm with Matt Baker - (Mar 15th)
Portugal with Michael Portillo - (Mar 15th)
The Sunday Show with Jonathan Capehart - (Mar 15th)
The Kitchen - (Mar 15th)
Match of the Day - (Mar 15th)
Vince - (Mar 15th)
Alex Witt Reports - (Mar 15th)
Would I Lie to You - (Mar 15th)
The Complaints Bureau - (Mar 15th)
First Dates Ireland - (Mar 15th)
Saturday Kitchen Live - (Mar 15th)
Ancient Aliens - (Mar 15th)
MotoGP Unlimited - (Mar 15th)
One Question - (Mar 15th)
Undercover High School - (Mar 15th)
The One Show - (Mar 15th)
The Katie Phang Show - (Mar 15th)
Prue Leiths Cotswold Kitchen - (Mar 15th)
Based on three different places, the film portrays the infractions to which people living in modern day China are subjected due to rapid developments: in the deceptively idyllic Yangshuo in the rainy south; in the apocalyptic coal mining site of Wuhai in the parched north; and in Chongqing, the urban behemoth on the Yangtze River. The protagonists give their accounts of the unsurmounted past, the precarious present and their tentative steps into the future. The film thus paints a complex image of the mental state of the people in this complicated country.
A documentary showing a Chinese investor's attempts to turn a small regional airport in north east Germany into a major international air traffic hub.
By exploring the relationship between the watched and the watching, our film uncovers the trauma and hope engendered by the Chinese all-surveilling state and lends a voice to those that stand in resilient defiance of such blatant abuse of power.
How do you reconcile a commitment to non-violence when faced with violence? Why do the poor often seem happier than the rich? Must a society lose its traditions in order to move into the future? These are some of the questions posed to His Holiness the Dalai Lama by filmmaker and explorer Rick Ray. Ray examines some of the fundamental questions of our time by weaving together observations from his own journeys throughout India and the Middle East, and the wisdom of an extraordinary spiritual leader. This is his story, as told and filmed by Rick Ray during a private visit to his monastery in Dharamsala, India over the course of several months. Also included is rare historical footage as well as footage supplied by individuals who at great personal risk, filmed with hidden cameras within Tibet.
After starting a family of his very own in the United States, a gay filmmaker documents his loving, traditional Chinese family's process of acceptance.
A documentary on seniors at a high school in a small Indiana town and their various cliques.
This film tells a story about an unschooled 11-year-old girl Yi-Jie, she's a truly global child who learns the world through the United Nations of Wastes while working with her YI minority parents in this recycle workshop thousand miles away from their mountain village home town
In an unfair country women work day and night far from home while their children learn to survive between loneliness and emptiness. They grow to become teenagers, locked down in one of many low income neighborhoods made up of identical small houses, outlined by overcrowding and scarcity. Their mothers, mostly workers in transnational factories, go in and out in buses that take them to a work place where they carry out twelve hour shifts two hours away from home, while their children muddle through their upbringing in tiny houses of 40 square meters. In spite of everything, they look for a way to move ahead and chase their illusions. This is a story full of youthful aspirations set in a context of difficulties and shortages.
This documentary recounts the experiences of people on the ground in the earliest days of the novel coronavirus and the way two countries dealt with its initial spread, from the first days of the outbreak in Wuhan to its rampage across the United States.
As a decades-old state-run aeronautics munitions factory in downtown Chengdu, China is being torn down for the construction of the titular luxury apartment complex, director Jia Zhangke interviews various people affiliated with it about their experiences.
Rosa is a Mexican woman who, at the age of 17, migrated illegally to Austin, Texas. Some years later, she was jailed under suspicion of murder and then taken to trial. This film demonstrates how the judicial process, the verdict, the separation from her family, and the helplessness of being imprisoned in a foreign country make Rosa’s story an example of the hard life of Mexican migrants in the United States.