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- The story revolves around the young Klara, who becomes pregnant because she gave herself to her admirer out of desperation before the marriage. Trapped in the narrowness of intolerant bourgeois morals, in the end she has no choice but to kill herself.
- Geografens Testamente explores the mysterious geography of Sweden, The Nordics and Europe with clues into a deep, thrilling and exciting adventure, that you will never forget.
- After separating from her husband Count James, Karin Stjernenhö receives custody of their son. But soon there are several attempts by the father to violently grab the boy. Instead of fatherly love, he is driven solely by greed for money: his son is heir to Karin's father's fortune.
- In his last moments, Socrates, convicted of 'seduction of youth' and 'blasphemy', tried to speak to his renounced disciples' consolation with the confidence that death meant only the end of bodily life, but that the spirit would continue to be immortal.
- Prospère, a former theatre director, runs a dive called "The Green Cockatoo". Many unsuccessful actors, Prospère's former employees, are regulars. But the tavern is also frequented by aristocrats. They hope to get the pleasant thrill of being among real street hustlers and other riffraff. So the actors play criminals.
- An evening at the Crazy Fish Sushi Bar: A lonely geezer courts the boss, an eye-catching sex blogger draws all the attention, a Japanese-Swiss family chews through a cultural conflict, and a restaurant critic painstakingly ogles each piece of food. Amid these episodes, Tobikomaki, a California roll, silently turns its laps on the conveyor belt. Its highest of existential highs is to be eaten.
- Helene Töpfer has decided to live with her husband Albert and her son Georg as mannequins in two shop windows of the "Hurtig" department store. While exploring, Georg discovers that all the dolls in the various sales departments once started as living mannequins and gradually transformed into dolls. And they only come back to life for a short time and at certain hours.
- Hosted by Rick Wakeman and Tony Ashton, the show features a mix of interviews with 1970s musicians and impromptu performances where the guest artist joins Rick and Tony with their house band in playing re-arranged versions of their classic songs, or entirely new pieces created for the show.
- Slaves of the Gas Chamber" - Tells the stories of suffering and survival of prisoners of the so-called Sonderkommando in the crematoria of Auschwitz-Birkenau. The Jewish prisoners of the Sonderkommando lived in the innermost circle of the death machinery. The Germans forced them to be witnesses and helpers of the genocide.
- Two trans-identified women share moments of love, insult, and masochism, exchanging both kiki and kai kai languages. Their syncopated exchanges oscillate from hateful to loving, blurring the distinction between lover and enemy - a position that both women seem to share.
- A BBC series following the development of popular music in the twentieth century. 'Whole Lotta Shakin' looks at the birth of Rock 'n' Roll, 'So You Want to be a Rock and Roll Star' looks at the mid 1960s, 'R-E-S-P-E-C-T' focuses on the black music of the 1960s, 'Crossroads' sees the birth of heavy metal, 'Eight Miles High' witnesses the psychedelic era, 'Hang on to Yourself' concerns the arrival of Glam, 'No Fun' looks at punk and reggae, 'Make it Funky' deals with disco music and 'Planet Rock' sees rock go global and the arrival of electro-pop and hip hop.
- A meditative journey into the depths of water - and mind. "Dive Odyssey" takes the viewers on a journey into crystal clear darkness where the only light ever is man-made. The film is an ode to thousands of years of mystical experience of water. It is also a tribute to science-fiction classics, some of which may be recognized in the film. The film follows the Explorer (Gemma Smith) through her exploration of an unknown planet. A strange signal is reaching for her from the depths of ice. She makes her way through the snow, looking for the source. Once she finds the spot, she begins a journey into the dark, ice cold world submerged below the mountains.
- The story of the Battle of Stalingrad from the perspective of a Panzer commander and an officer in a penal battalion. The two main characters in are the Panzer commander Vilshofen and Gnotke, NCO of a Strafbattalion (penal battalion). Both men come from different backgrounds and experience the war differently. The Colonel is a convinced soldier who obeys orders and cares for his men. He fights with a sense of duty, but loses confidence in the German military leadership as he senses that he and his men are being sacrificed to a lost cause. NCO Gnotke's work is to collect the dead, or their dismembered parts, from the battlefield. He loses his humanity as he works under constant fire and is exposed to unrelenting horror month after month during the war, even to the point of warming up his body on freshly fallen soldiers.
- After an accident left Melody Gardot immobile, a doctor suggested music therapy. Now she has two acclaimed albums, and is performing at the London Jazz Festival.
- After P. C. Gordon is murdered and robbed of a diamond ring that he bought as a birthday present for his wife, one of the thieves, C. Dates, is apprehended. A woman prosecuting attorney makes a compelling case against him, and he is given a ten-year penitentiary sentence. Dates escapes and heads for the vacant lot where he buried the ring. Meanwhile, a boy playing in the lot digs up the ring and gives it to his older brother, Guy Braxton, a prosperous dry goods merchant. Guy shows it to William Jackson, an unscrupulous lawyer. When Pauline Keith, Jackson's young stenographer, learns of Jackson's scheme to steal the diamond, which also involves her own father and a woman named Flora Fulton, she begins to investigate.
- Featuring the infamous Bill Grundy interview, snippets of live footage including God Save the Queen, No Fun, and two versions of Anarchy in the UK. Also watch for cameos by Siouxsie, Malcolm, Vivienne, Jordan from Jubilee, and Shane McGowan who would later form the Pogues.
- RAF veteran Cathal O'Shannon uncovers the truth about the war criminals and collaborators who found refuge in Ireland in the years after World War II
- A docu-drama about tetrachloro-dibenzo dioxin, later known as 'Sevesogift', sprayed on thousands of tons of vapor in Vietnam 'Agent Orange', and the involvement of the later Federal President, Richard Karl Weizsäcker, who was hiring manager when production was moved to another plant because of massive health problems of the workers, but claims to be unable to remember anything, in these crimes.
- The storyteller Dennis Hopper tells about the production of the West German movie "Jungle Fever/Euer Weg führt durch die Hölle" (1984), filmed in Mexico.
- The Efrom Allen's Underground TV show from Sept. 29, 1978. Two weeks prior to Nancy Spungen death at the Chelsea Hotel, NYC.
- A cinema verite portrait of the recording of Zevon's swansong album: 'The Wind'
- An interview with the British neurologist Oliver Sacks. One of his most famous books is Awakenings (1973) about people that suffer from the economo disease, a sleeping disorder.
- Techno fans will dig the power and energy in this compilation featuring nine of the innovative British trio's jam sessions captured in Japan, Holland, Belgium, England and Ireland during their 1998-'99 world tour. Crisp sound makes tracks such as "Push Upstairs" and "Pearls Girl" pulsate with perfection. Add vivid concert film melded with imaginative visuals, and this dynamic video can't be beat.
- A film about the secret films of the Third Reich trying to convince the public and the Nazi party members on euthanasia having to to with the "T4" program. The killing of handicapped people. The most important aspect of the T4 program is the gas chambers created to murder, successful, and used to a larger capacity in the death camps later on.
- About some unusual worship practices of some Pentecostal Christians in Appalachia, including snake handling, dancing with fire, speaking in tongues, and drinking of poison.
- After Sarayevo, the wars in Balkans are expanding, touching Athens. The economy of the country collapses. A strange word appears on the walls of the city. Philosophy. But the adjuster is still working in the ruins. When the President announces state's bail out and suggests "Philosophy" as the only activity, everything changes.
- Each year, groups of Tibetan children secretly flee their homeland over the Himalayas to reach schools in India founded by the government in exile. Entrusted to smugglers, they are risking their lives by illegally crossing the great Himalayan range, a towering rampart between Tibet and India.
- The Harlem Cultural Festival, also known as "Black Woodstock", was a series of music concerts held in Harlem, Manhattan, New York City during the summer of 1969 to celebrate African American music and culture and to promote the continued politics of Black pride.
- "The Wickedest Place in the World - Tourists Welcome", so says the banner across main street. Bill Scott rides into the city looking for adventure. At the Palace Hotel, the wickedest place in Satan Town, Sue of the Salvation Army strives to reach one or two of the drunks, gamblers, and prostitutes that throng the saloon. Malamute, the bouncer at the bar, never shies from a fight, and what's more, he's never lost one. Sue, to her misfortune, has gotten on his nerves. Bill enters just in time to get between Malamute and Sue. After a brief but spirited battle, Malamute is bested.
- A floundering Harlem barbershop is the setting and the cauldron of action that leads to tragic consequences. Russell B Parker, a former vaudeville hoofer, is a man of big dreams but small ambitions. He hardly works at all in fact, often spending the time incessantly playing checkers with his friend, William Jenkins. Parker lives with Theopolis and Bobby, his two unemployed sons, and Adele, his hard-working daughter. The ghost of his dead wife, a woman who drove herself into an early grave working to support the family, nags at his conscience.
- At the age of 40, Ellen decides to finally learn to read and write. Since no courses are offered in the community college of her hometown, she moves to Berlin. Completely on her own, she is full of optimism and has the courage to be consistent.
- A documentary on the history of one of the greatest record labels ever.
- 2006– 1h 8m8.8 (19)TV EpisodeBorn in Ukraine in 2008 in the wake of the "Orange Revolution", the feminist movement Femen fights for democracy, freedom of the press, women's rights, and against corruption, prostitution, sexism, racism, poverty and religions. Her activists quickly caught the attention of the media by shocking actions carried bare toes, the body covered with slogans. In 2012, at the creation of Femen France, Caroline Fourest followed their actions. They notably affirmed their support for "Marriage for All" by protesting on November 18, 2012, during the demonstration organized by the Civitas Institute against the bill, provoking sharp clashes.
- Inspired by the German folktale "Der Freischütz". Wilhelm, a file clerk, falls in love with a huntsman's daughter. In order to marry, Wilhelm must prove his worth as a hunter and gain her father's approval.
- St. Petersburg 1881. On one of his aimless walks, the fanciful Fyodor, who is kept away from life by his daydreams, meets the girl Nastenka, who is waiting in vain for her lover Viktor. Fyodor, in reality awkward and inhibited, dreams up a brilliant heroic role. He shyly confesses his love to Nastenka, who, in her disappointment, is ready to return it.
- An effort to uncover the true meaning of the Iraq War. In the wake of 9/11, the agency was formed by award-winning veteran cameraman James Nachtwey and colleagues.
- Two young Italian guest workers in Germany find a beautiful dead woman one morning on the way to their job. The Kripo quickly determines that the dark-haired, young woman is the well-known prostitute Elena Rossano. The short, brutal and intense life of the girl is rolled presented in flashbacks.
- Rare documents and details of the film's story. From its initial option to its critical reception and legacy. Director David Weisman, who also produced "Kiss of the Spider Woman", comes off as rightful creative force behind the production, as it was his true passion.
- When the young Vincent Van Gogh left his parents' house, only his younger brother Theo regretted it. The two meet again in London, where Vincent is denied success as an art dealer because he is unable to adjust to the usual business practices. Even studying theology with its scholarly externals didn't appeal to the pastor's son, as a lay preacher he experienced the misery of the miners in Belgium. Van Gogh was not very satisfied with his artistic beginnings as a painter until he experienced liberation in Arles in collaboration with Gaugin.
- Paul David, computer expert and hacker, is caught in a international data network and is confronted with criminals operating behind the scenes of a worldwide organization, which uses the most modern communication technology for cleverly coordinated, criminal actions.
- Yolanda, a Spanish woman living in Mexico, wants to hide her dark past; of Raúl, his son, who seeks the true identity of his father, whom is believed dead 24 years ago, and Lucia, a young high class woman, who comes to live in the neighborhood, weary of the abuse exercised on her Octavio , the lover of his mother.
- 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.
- A Swedish Kareoke cup in a small village
- The poet moves to Washington to care for injured Civil War soldiers but is disillusioned by the Gilded Age after the war. He recovers from a debilitating stroke to live out his days in Camden NJ, where he continues to write poetry.
- The twentieth century young man Nils ends up in Kalmar 1397, due to an error on the mobile phone. He meets the medieval girl Katarina, who works in the bathhouse of wise old man Rodwy. Nils sets out to find a real knight, but finds only Catherine who is hiding something.
- Focuses on the future of the integration of automation into economics, as well as the impact of this integration to the worldwide workforce.
- Explores the reality of homelessness in Southern California. Conversations with people who do not have homes.
- A six hour long monologue performed by Edith Clever, who reads texts by Syberberg, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Heinrich von Kleist, Plato, Friedrich Hölderlin, Novalis, Friedrich Nietzsche, Eduard Mörike, Richard Wagner, William Shakespeare, Martin Heidegger, Samuel Beckett and chief Seattle.
- Performed in the actual Roman settings described in the libretto. The scenes take place at the appropriate times of day. Rome, June 1800. Floria Tosca is a celebrated opera singer, better known as La Tosca. Her lover is Mario Cavaradossi, a young artist and Bomapartist sympathizer. When the latter helps Angelotti, the leader of the opposition, to escape from prison and hides him in La Tosca's home, he antagonizes Baron Scarpia, the ruthless chief of police, all the more as his love for Tosca is unrequited.
- The 12 year old Ino struggle to become a great pianist. Success depends on the music competition "Ein Herz für Mozart".