Lumina 2024 - Movies (Mar 9th)
My Husband the Cyborg 2025 - Movies (Mar 9th)
Flow 2024 - Movies (Mar 8th)
In the Summers 2024 - Movies (Mar 8th)
Old Guy 2024 - Movies (Mar 8th)
Captain America Brave New World 2025 - Movies (Mar 8th)
Moana 2 2024 - Movies (Mar 7th)
Ghost Cat Anzu 2024 - Movies (Mar 7th)
The Silent Planet 2024 - Movies (Mar 7th)
Tuesday 2024 - Movies (Mar 7th)
Plankton The Movie 2025 - Movies (Mar 7th)
CHAOS The Manson Murders 2025 - Movies (Mar 7th)
George A. Romeros Resident Evil 2025 - Movies (Mar 7th)
The Little Mermaid 2024 - Movies (Mar 7th)
Bloat 2025 - Movies (Mar 7th)
Confessions of a Romance Narrator 2025 - Movies (Mar 6th)
Woods of Ash 2025 - Movies (Mar 6th)
Agents 2024 - Movies (Mar 6th)
Barbie and Teresa Recipe for Friendship 2025 - Movies (Mar 6th)
Picture This 2025 - Movies (Mar 6th)
Mozarts Sister 2024 - Movies (Mar 5th)
Married at First Sight - (Mar 9th)
Australian Idol - (Mar 9th)
Space Invaders - (Mar 9th)
Lonely Planet- Roads Less Travelled - (Mar 9th)
Gladiators- Epic Pranks - (Mar 9th)
Screwballs - (Mar 9th)
Bad Monkey - (Oct 2nd)
Midnight Family - (Oct 2nd)
Wheres Wanda - (Oct 2nd)
Tell Me Lies - (Oct 2nd)
Seoul Busters - (Oct 2nd)
American Sports Story - (Oct 2nd)
The Bay - (Oct 2nd)
Unsolved Mysteries - (Oct 2nd)
The Kelly Clarkson Show - (Oct 2nd)
Dark Winds - (Mar 9th)
On Patrol- Live - (Mar 9th)
WWE Main Event - (Mar 9th)
All Elite Wrestling- Collision - (Mar 9th)
New York Homicide - (Mar 9th)
This is an example of one of those rather dryly narrated documentaries that we might have seen at school. It divides the country of West Germany into three segments and uses the Rhine river as a conduit for much of our tour. The West and South is a major source of timber and home to Heidelberg University. Further upstream, the Mosel joins at Koblenz - famous for it's wines. The Rhine gorge is narrow but it carries a great deal of trade before hitting Bonn and then Cologne - itself an important intersection of trade routes and very close to the vast Ruhr coalfields and the industrial heartland of a country linked extensively by a network of canals. Next we head to the uplands in the North. The odd volcanic feature and reservoirs that feed hydro-electric power stations are all that's left of the once prosperous silver mining community. It's intensively, and surprisingly traditionally, farmed now with some peculiarly spooky clocks on ornately decorated town halls and some typical twisted church spires. Frankfurt now thrives as an industrial centre - even amidst the violent thunderstorm we see here! Lake Constance separates Germany from Austria and Switzerland and is dotted with towns and villages that can trace their origins back to Roman times. Munich is now the regional centre - "the place of monks": the last bastion before the Alps rise up steeply fit for hay and little else. The Bavarian community is deeply Catholic in faith and the buildings frequently reflect that with their external illustrations and roadside icons. With winter looming, the farming community reconvenes at a lower altitude to avoid the excesses of the alpine conditions. Finally, we heard to the part of the territory that stretches from the Baltic to the North sea, includes Berlin and, of course, the entirety of what constitutes East Germany. Fishing is important to this community as are the muddy spas. The Kiel canal is an impressive structure even if it's importance to shipping has largely diminished. Lübeck is not now what it once was but Hamburg on the Elbe has proved much more adaptable following its near destruction during WWII. Indeed much of the thrust of this latter part focusses on the speed with which Germany has recovered from the war and we end up in the capital city - a vibrant and diverse city that still shows signs of it's Nazi past and illustrates the wall poignantly with the DDR flag flying from the Brandenburg gate.
A documentary of the German national soccer team’s 2006 World Cup experience that changed the face of modern Germany.
Filmmaker Alain Resnais documents the atrocities behind the walls of Hitler's concentration camps.
He was one of Germany's leading investment experts with an income of several million Euros per day. Now, he sits on one of the upper floors of an empty bank building in the middle of Frankfurt, overlooking a skyline of glass and steel. And talks. In an extended mix of a monologue and an in-depth interview, which is as frightening as it is fascinating, he shares his inside knowledge from a megalomaniac parallel world where illusions are the market's hardest currency. Marc Bauder's 'Master of the Universe' is based on meticulous research and provides us with geniune insight into the notoriously secretive and self-protective 'universe' of which our nameless protagonist experiences himself a master. Where other films on the financial meltdown have focused on the epic nature of larger-than-life business, Bauder probes the mentality that made it possible in the first place. A tense drama where psychology meets finance - two things that are more closely linked than you would like to believe.
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.
The passage of time is spellbinding in this cinematic tour de force about the Wadden Sea. A film that inhales and exhales along with the tides as it explores the fragile relationship between man and nature.
A film essay investigating the question of what “the West” means beyond the cardinal direction: a model of society inscribed itself in the Federal Republic of Germany’s postwar history and architecture. The narrator shifts among reflections on modern architecture and property relations, detailed scenes from childhood, and a passed-down memory of a “hemmed-in West Germany,” recalling the years of her parents’ membership in a 1970s communist splinter group.
Seven adventurers embark on an expedition in the world's most hostile environment, The Arctic. Starting from the Southernmost peninsula of Spitsbergen Svalbard, they travel to the Northernmost part of the Island lasting for 40 days.
Christof Wackernagel, best known in Germany as an actor and former member of the Red Army Faction ("RAF") lives in Mali. In his compelling portrait, Jonas Grosch shows a man who simply cannot stand still if he senses injustice. The courage to stand up for one’s beliefs coupled with vanity? However one chooses to look at it, it is easy to imagine what made him connect with the "RAF". With his irrepressible will for freedom, Christof Wackernagel gets entangled in the horrors of day-to-day life in Africa.
On June 1st, 2019, around 11:30pm, the shoot which represents a turning point in the federal republic falls. In the hessian small town Wolfhagen-Istha, the district president of Kassel, Walter Lübcke, is murdered during this night, while, just a few meters away, the annual carnival is putting the locals into a festive mood. It is DNA-evidence on the clothes of Walter Lübcke which leads the investigators on June 15th, 2019, to his presumptive murderer: Stephan Ernst. The previously convicted right-wing extremist Ernst gets arrested by a SEK unit in Kassel. A first background check reveals: Stephan Ernst was known to the security authorities, but they did not have him on their radar for six years. Now he is back. And a person is dead. The docu-drama “Schuss in der Nacht” („Shoot in the dark“) tells emotionally, and simultaneously factually, how the deadly attack on Lübcke came to be. It tells about the first far-right motivated murder of a politician since the era of national socialism.
From the inner workings of the RAF. Former RAF-member Peter-Jürgen Boock reveal the many secrets and myths about the Baader-Meinhof gang a.k.a. RAF - Rote Armee Fraktion.