The Bear Lake Murders 2025 - Movies (Jan 18th)
The Return 2024 - Movies (Jan 18th)
The Magicians Raincoat 2024 - Movies (Jan 18th)
Vindication Swim 2024 - Movies (Jan 18th)
Sebastian 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Hounds of War 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
A Quiet Place Day One 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Cabrini 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Every Little Thing 2024 - Movies (Jan 18th)
The Bad Shepherd 2024 - Movies (Jan 17th)
The Bouncer 2024 - Movies (Jan 17th)
Tuesdays Trash 2024 - Movies (Jan 17th)
Boonie Bears Time Twist 2024 - Movies (Jan 17th)
Love Courage and the Battle of Bushy Run 2024 - Movies (Jan 17th)
Emmas Big Adventure 2024 - Movies (Jan 17th)
Balloonerism 2025 - Movies (Jan 17th)
The Girl Who Cried Her Eyes Out 2024 - Movies (Jan 17th)
Clear Cut 2024 - Movies (Jan 17th)
You Gotta Believe 2024 - Movies (Jan 17th)
Wolf Man 2025 - Movies (Jan 17th)
My Divorce Party 2024 - Movies (Jan 17th)
The Masked Singer- AfterMask - (Jan 19th)
Love Island- All Stars - (Jan 18th)
Match of the Day - (Jan 18th)
The Masked Singer - (Jan 18th)
Gladiators - (Jan 18th)
Sarah Beenys New Life in the Country - (Jan 18th)
Saturday Kitchen Live - (Jan 18th)
The Katie Phang Show - (Jan 18th)
Alex Witt Reports - (Jan 18th)
Ainsleys Fantastic Flavours - (Jan 18th)
James Martins Saturday Morning - (Jan 18th)
The Thundermans- Undercover - (Jan 18th)
Wizards Beyond Waverly Place - (Jan 18th)
The Kitchen - (Jan 18th)
When the Stars Gossip - (Jan 18th)
Raw - (Jan 18th)
The Kelly Clarkson Show - (Jan 18th)
NFL Icons - (Jan 18th)
Green Eyed Killers - (Jan 18th)
All 4 Adventure - (Jan 18th)
A documentary on the massacre of Planas in the Colombian east plains in 1970. An Indigenous community formed a cooperative to defend their rights from settlers and colonists, but the government organized a military operation to protect the latter and foreign companies.
In Dark Green we follow conservationist and storyteller Paul Rosolie deep into the jungle of the Amazon, risking his life to learn more on this last remaining wilderness on earth.
How the Fiddle Flows follows Canada's great rivers west along the fur-trading route of the early Europeans. The newcomers introduced the fiddle to the Aboriginal people they intermarried with along the way. A generation later, their mixed-blood offspring would blend European folk tunes with First Nations rhythms to create a rich and distinct musical tradition. From the Gaspé Peninsula, north to Hudson Bay and to the Prairies, How the Fiddle Flows reveals how a distinctive Metis identity and culture were shaped over time. Featuring soaring performances by some of Canada's best known fiddlers and step dancers and narrated by award-winning actress Tantoo Cardinal.
This documentary focuses on the goose hunt, a ritual of central importance to the Cree people of the James Bay coastal areas. Not only a source of food, the hunt is also used to transfer Cree culture, skills, and ethics to future generations. Filmmaker Paul M. Rickard invites us along with his own family on a fall goose hunt, so that we can share in the experience.
Sujin and her grandmother are shamans living in the mountains. It is their important daily routine to offer purified water to gods and tell a fortune for troubled hearts. During high school, Sujin works hard to go to college with hopes of escaping her fate and living a normal life. But the excitement of busy college life deepens her conflict with her grandmother.
The film follows Postcommodity, an interdisciplinary arts collective comprised of Raven Chacon, Cristóbal Martinez and Kade L. Twist, who put land art in a tribal context. The group bring together a community to construct the Repellent Fence, a two-mile long ephemeral monument “stitching” together the US and Mexico.
For hundreds of years, Taiwan has been under different colonial rules. From the Dutch, the Spanish, the Japanese, and nowadays Republic of China, each regime left their footprints on this island. Only the indigenous people of this island experienced of the process. They were given different names during different periods of colonisation and their cultures have been changed. Through the life of a Truku elder, we see the history of aboriginal recertification movement.
This documentary rescues the valuable work of Martha Colmenares, an indigenous woman from the Zapotec highlands, who in the 1980s filmed the life and customs of her own community, becoming a pioneer of indigenous documentaries. And for the first time, her forgotten story, for forty years, will no longer be invisible.
In the central Peruvian Amazon, a young indigenous man from the Nomatsigenga Community of Boca Kiatari, shares his urgent message with the world. In a moving short film, the community comes together to preserve their natural environment, aware of the growing challenges of climate change and global warming.
Over the centuries, explorers traded tales of a lost civilization amid the dense Amazonian rainforest. Scientists dismissed the legends as exaggerations, believing that the rainforest could not sustain such a huge population—until now. A new generation of explorers armed with 21st-century technology has uncovered remarkable evidence that could reinvent our understanding of the Amazon and the indigenous peoples who lived there. Using CGI and dramatic re-creations, National Geographic re-imagines the banks of the Amazon 500 years ago, teeming with inhabitants living in the Lost Cities of the Amazon.