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1-36 of 36
- The lives of a young boy, his classmates and their gym teacher are shattered forever by the presence of a shooter in their small-town elementary school.
- In colour and 4K Ultra HD, meticulously restored from recently discovered 16mm prints, shows diva Maria Callas performing at the Paris Opera for the first time December 19th 1958.
- In 1942, more than 8,000 Jews were arrested on 16 and 17 July and sent to the Vélodrome d'Hiver sports center in the 15th district, a stone's throw from the Eiffel Tower, before being deported. The expression "Vel d'Hiv round-up" has become part of our collective memory, to the point of becoming the main memorial reference point for France during the dark years. Based on research carried out in unpublished or rarely explored archives, this film retraces the history of this roundup as experienced by hunted Jews and police trackers, from its planning in the Vichy offices to its hour-by-hour unfolding in the streets of Paris.
- Egyptologist Elizabeth Frood takes us back a century to experience the discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb exactly as it happened, all thanks to the colourisation of the original photos and film.
- To celebrate Jack London's 100th death anniversary, director Fx Goby adapted his famous novel, "To Build a Fire", tragic tale of a trapper and his dog in the freezing Yukon, into an animated short film.
- Sasha crosses Marseille from her building on the city's heights to the port. On her way, she encounters men's insistent glances. The city is beautiful, lively, sunny, concrete. Sasha's walk is a tangle of glances, strained silences, and city gusts. Arriving at the Mucem pier, she waits for someone who doesn't come.
- If Nazi medicine and its monstrous experiments were partially judged at Nuremberg the role assigned as early as 1933 by Heinrich Himmler, the master of the SS, to the entire German scientific community is less known. Obsessed by the desire to prove the superiority of the Germanic race, the future project manager of the final solution created in 1935 the Ahnenerbe (ancestral heritage) a scientific institute endowed with colossal means to carry out excavation sites and shipments around the world.
- Horse meat labeled as beef. Honey diluted with cheap sugar syrups. Counterfeit extra-virgin olive oil. Food crime is a multi-billion dollar industry affecting everything. 10% of what we eat is adulterated in worrying food fraud.
- Perkoa gold mine, Burkina Faso. 13-year-old Opio works on the grounds earning only a bag of rocks every month. His father wants him to go to school but can't afford the tuition fees. Opio must find money by himself.
- This is the story of a tiger setting out to conquer the love of his life. It's the story of a tiger to whom his buddy absolutely must say something. It's the tragicomedy of a paper tiger.
- From the turn of the century to the 1960s millions of immigrants arrive in search of the American dream. Initially they're welcomed with open arms, but soon America shuts its doors to them. Rare home movies, seen in color for the first time, reveal the extraordinary stories of a host of ordinary immigrants.
- At the start of the 20th Century, Alaska is seen as frozen wasteland, filled with nothing but Inuits and Polar bears. It is America's last frontier. The discovery of Gold attracts Americans in their droves. Over the next six decades the exploitation of Alaska's vast natural resources leads to statehood.
- Small towns are the heart and soul of America. At the turn of the century tightly-knit, communities, embody the pioneer spirit. Small town heroes like Will Rogers and jimmy Stewart capture the nation's hearts. In reality many are mired in poverty and desperation. As the city's expand, so the myth of the small town grows and continues to burn brightly in the minds of Americans.
- Today the Royal Family is one of Britain's best loved institutions but in the early 20th century they have to fight for their popularity and survival. Rare film, seen in color for the first time, tells the story of how House of Windsor nearly fell and how they brought the monarchy back from the brink of disaster.
- This is the story of Britain's greatest leader, told in color for the very first time. Winston Churchill, the soldier and politician, rises quickly through the military and political ranks.
- Experts breakdown the successes and mistakes made by the Germans in their invasion of France, the tactics employed by the British Navy in order to rescue the BEF and the political maneuverings in London
- 2021– 51mTV-147.8 (180)TV EpisodeThe U-Boats dominate the North Atlantic from 1939 wreaking havoc on shipping. We see the various tactics and developments which all-but neutralize the U-Boats in the North Atlantic by mid-1943
- The estimates of scientists around the world are alarming: by 2100, the rise in water levels will vary between 50 cm and 2 meters depending on the coastline. 90% of the world's coastal cities are affected. But the threat is multiple. Not only is the sea level rising, but the storms that accompany it are increasingly violent, the salt of the water is destroying the land and the force of the movements is eating away at the soil on which these cities rest. An army of scientists is on the move, like thousands of soldiers in battle order, to find solutions before it is too late.
- 1939-1940. Germany has already invaded Austria and Czechoslovakia. But it's only when Hitler takes Poland that the Second World War begins in earnest.
- 1941. The war is intensifying, and the Axis powers seem unstoppable. Hitler sends troops to the Soviet border to launch Operation Barbarossa.
- 1942. The war has engulfed the entire world, and the Germans are winning. Until slowly, after the Battle of Stalingrad, the tide starts to turn.
- 1943. Changing tactics, the Allies venture into enemy territory. But despite heavy bombing, they struggle to gain a foothold in "Fortress Europe."
- 1944. The allies decide that invading Nazi-occupied Europe is their only option. on D-Day, 100,000 soldiers cross the Channel to take back France.
- 1945. Allied forces have reached Berlin, but Germany and Japan show no sign of give up. The US unleash one last display of military might.
- The 1920s was a decade of unprecedented change for America. Soldiers returned from war. Well-paid jobs were plentiful. Women cast aside "proper behavior," and the Jazz Age erupted. It was an era of vibrant times and colorful characters, but for nearly a century, many have only seen it in black and white, until now. For the first time, we present the Roaring '20s in color, from Ford's assembly line to Charles Lindbergh's transatlantic flight and from speakeasies to New York's Wall Street, before and after the crash.
- During the turbulent 1930s the stock market crash sent the United States into a tailspin of violence and disorder. As one president flounders, another offers a New Deal, putting America back to work and reshaping the landscape in the process. Revisit a decade when our nation was pushed to its limits and fought its way through, presented like it's never been seen before -- in color. From the end of Prohibition to the start of bold projects and from Dust Bowl nightmares to Technicolor Hollywood dreams, it's the '30s as only few have seen them.
- It was an American era defined by a world war that united a nation and triggered an economic boom, but also unleashed fear and prejudice. This is the story of the 1940s like it's never been seen before, thanks to digital colorization technology. Watch our transformation from an isolated country to a global superpower, captured by rarely seen footage of the Pearl Harbor attacks, home movies behind the barbed wire fences of Japanese American internment camps, and newsreels of post-war celebration, discontentment, and growing prosperity.
- The 1960s in the United States is a decade that played out on national television, decided a presidency, divided a nation about a war, and on July 20, 1969, declared a winner of the Space Race. Witness the dawn of modern America as it unfolded, through famous, and infamous, images and footage, shown in full color. From the drama of the Cuban Missile Crisis to the music of the Beatles, and from the March on Washington to the walk on the moon, we present the '60s like they've never been seen before.
- At the dawn of the 20th century, America west of the Mississippi was wild and untamed, featuring formidable landscapes and treacherous rivers. But in the following decades, industry and opportunity transformed the region into an economic and political powerhouse that drove change across the country and the world. Presented for the first time in color, revisit lands made famous by Buffalo Bill, championed by Teddy Roosevelt, and developed by opportunists seeking adventure and fortune.
- America is still a rural nation in 1910. Most homes don't have electricity, and less than one percent of the population owns a car. But that changes with the rise of Henry Ford, Harvey Firestone, and Thomas Edison, who help foster the economic and technological booms of the early 20th century. Through colorized archival footage and personal home movies, explore the business relationships that transformed America and glimpse into powerful friendships that lasted a lifetime.
- At the start of the 20th century, Americans find themselves with more time and money on their hands. Coney Island launches the country's first amusement parks and proves that big profits can be earned from fun and entertainment. By 1953, Americans are spending $18 billion a year on leisure activities like camping, bowling, and attending sports events. This is the story of America at play, presented through digitally remastered and colorized archival footage and rarely seen home movies.
- American royalty: a potent combination of popularity, glamour, money, and power. In the early 20th century, the Rockefellers and Vanderbilts build empires and spend fortunes. The Roosevelts and Kennedys spawn political dynasties. And news magnate William Randolph Hearst records it all, using film to cash in on the glitzy lives of the rich and famous. Now, through rare archival footage and home movies, get a colorful inside look at these storied families working hard and playing hard.
- The movie industry was born in West Orange, NJ in 1893 by Thomas Edison. Within thirty years, Hollywood grew into America's fourth largest, and by far most glamorous, industry. Revisit the Golden Age of Hollywood, when actors became global celebrities, moguls became millionaires, and the entire nation became movie crazy. Using digitally remastered news footage, rare studio archives, and home movie footage, look back on the dawn and meteoric rise of Tinseltown in color.