The Ceremony Is About to Begin 2024 - Movies (Feb 17th)
SNL50 The Anniversary Special 2025 - Movies (Feb 17th)
Mufasa The Lion King 2024 - Movies (Feb 17th)
Hobby Hustle 2025 - Movies (Feb 17th)
Cabrini 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Big Rage 2024 - Movies (Feb 17th)
Return to Office 2025 - Movies (Feb 16th)
SNL50 The Homecoming Concert 2025 - Movies (Feb 16th)
Captain America Brave New World 2025 - Movies (Feb 14th)
The Lord of the Rings The War of the Rohirrim 2024 - Movies (Feb 14th)
The Peanut Man 2024 - Movies (Feb 14th)
The Most Beautiful Girl in The World 2025 - Movies (Feb 14th)
The Dead Thing 2024 - Movies (Feb 14th)
Paddington in Peru 2024 - Movies (Feb 13th)
My Fault London 2025 - Movies (Feb 13th)
Trust in Love 2024 - Movies (Feb 13th)
La Dolce Villa 2025 - Movies (Feb 13th)
Christmas Cowboy 2024 - Movies (Feb 13th)
Emmanuelle 2024 - Movies (Feb 12th)
The Simpsons The Past and the Furious 2025 - Movies (Feb 12th)
Goodbye Hello 2024 - Movies (Feb 12th)
The Ceremony Is About to Begin 2024 - ()
SNL50 The Anniversary Special 2025 - ()
Mufasa The Lion King 2024 - ()
Hobby Hustle 2025 - ()
Cabrini 2024 - ()
Big Rage 2024 - ()
Return to Office 2025 - ()
SNL50 The Homecoming Concert 2025 - ()
Captain America Brave New World 2025 - ()
The Lord of the Rings The War of the Rohirrim 2024 - ()
The Peanut Man 2024 - ()
The Most Beautiful Girl in The World 2025 - ()
The Dead Thing 2024 - ()
Paddington in Peru 2024 - ()
My Fault London 2025 - ()
Trust in Love 2024 - ()
La Dolce Villa 2025 - ()
Christmas Cowboy 2024 - ()
Emmanuelle 2024 - ()
The Simpsons The Past and the Furious 2025 - ()
Is building our own starship Enterprise possible? Will we ever travel between the stars as easily as they do in Star Trek? JJ Abrams' new feature, Star Trek Into Darkness, hits the screen in a golden age of scientific discoveries. HISTORY is there, giving viewers a deep look behind the scenes, on the set, and into the science–amazing new exoplanets, the physics of Warp drive, and the ideas behind how we might one day live in a Star Trek Universe.
From Raymond Baxter live on Tomorrow's World testing a new-fangled bulletproof vest on a nervous inventor to Doctor Who's contemporary spin on the War on Terror, British television and the Great British public have been fascinated with the brave new world offered up by science on TV. Narrated by Robert Webb, this documentary takes a fantastic, incisive and funny voyage through the rich heritage of science TV in the UK, from real science programmes (including The Sky At Night, Horizon, Tomorrow's World, The Ascent of Man) to science-fiction (such as The Quatermass Experiment, Doctor Who, Doomwatch, Blake's 7, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy), to find out what it tells us about Britain over the last 60 years.
Concern over global climate change may be at an all-time high, but climate change is nothing new - the earth's climate always followed natural cycles of warming and cooling. In Unstoppable Solar Cycles, Dr. Willie Soon and Dr. David Legates challenge the popular idea that human-generated CO2, is causing catastrophic global warming. These scientists propose an alterantive theory - that the current warming has more to do with solar activity than with human activity.
Just outside Paris, France, inside a high-tech vault, requiring three independently controlled keys, rests a small metallic cylinder about the diameter of a golf ball. Encased within three vacuum-sealed bell jars it may not look like much, but it is one of the most important objects on the planet. It affects nearly every aspect of our lives from the moment we are born, to the food we eat, the cars we drive, and even the medicines we take. The Last Artifact follows the high-stakes race to redefine the weight of the world reveals the untold story of one of the most important objects on the planet. The kilogram, the base unit of mass in the International System of Units, helped send humans to the moon and satellites into space. This small hunk of metal is the object against which all others are measured. Yet over time, its mass mysteriously eroded by the weight of an eyelash. A change that, unbeknownst to most, unleashed a crisis with potentially dire consequences.
A documentary on Al Gore's campaign to make the issue of global warming a recognized problem worldwide.
Fascinating - and unintentionally funny - experiments at Austria's famed Institute for Experimental Psychology involve a subject who for several weeks wears special glasses that reverse right and left and up and down. Unexpectedly, these macabre and somehow surrealist experiments reveal that our perception of these aspects of vision is not of an optical nature and cannot be relied on, while the unfortunate, Kafkaesque subject stubbornly struggles through a morass of continuous failures.
Physicist Dr Helen Czerski takes us on a journey into the science of bubbles - not just fun toys, but also powerful tools that push back the boundaries of science.
An examination of the extinction threat faced by frogs, which have hopped on Earth for some 250 million years and are a crucial cog in the ecosystem. Scientists believe they've pinpointed a cause for the loss of many of the amphibians: the chytrid fungus, which flourishes in high altitudes. Unfortunately, they don't know how to combat it. Included: an isolated forest in Panama that has yet to be touched by the fungus, thus enabling frogs to live and thrive as they have for eons.
A world leading team of ultra-low temperature physicists at Lancaster University decided to place a LEGO figure and four LEGO blocks inside their record-breaking dilution refrigerator. This machine - specially made at the University - is the most effective refrigerator in the world, capable of reaching 1.6 millidegrees above absolute zero (minus 273.15 Centigrade), which is about 200,000 times colder than room temperature and 2,000 times colder than deep space.
Thirty distinguished astronomers are visited at their observatories throughout the world in this comprehensive report of astronomical theories, research, and discoveries.
A celebration of the universe, displaying the whole of time, from its start to its final collapse. This film examines all that occurred to prepare the world that stands before us now: science and spirit, birth and death, the grand cosmos and the minute life systems of our planet.