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- The quest for a perfect partner gets a modern swipe. This documentary follows two young journalists, France and Thomas, during their pursuit of love using the famous mobile application, Tinder. Will they manage to find 'the one' using modern day cat and mobile mouse games or will this popular means of smartphone meet-ups get the better of them?
- It's been thirty years since the massacre at Tianamen Square in Beijing, where upwards of a few thousand students were killed in the military crackdown on their protests, the massacre which the Communist Party of China refuses to talk about or even acknowledge as having happened. With new official documents coming to light as well as the surfacing of other eyewitness video accounts, the seven weeks of the protest leading to the massacre are dissected in detail, it a time when China seemed to be on the brink of a new direction to possible democracy. While many factors led to the ultimate outcome, the core issues seem to be the students being unable to convince even the reformers within the Communist Party that they wanted a dialogue as the potential future leaders of the Party rather than wanting a regime change (i.e. to overthrow the existing government), while the Party leaders seemed to focus in on one word in a report - turmoil - they wanting to avoid long term turmoil with the turmoil of the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s still relatively fresh in their minds.
- This is the story of two worlds that appear to have little in common with one another. A closer look, however, reveals that they both share a similar taste for luxury, risk, and money. In what ways are mafias and banks inextricably linked?
- The growth of the world's narcotics trafficking system has mirrored the growth of the world's economic system in many surprising ways over the past two-and-a-half centuries. Currently, illicit drug production and usage runs rampant throughout the world, with the health of humankind suffering as a consequence, with no apparent end to illicit, addictive drug sales in sight.
- Adapting Milgram's experiment into a game show format, this documentary explores the limits of human obedience to a new type of authority figure: television.
- "What Do Young Girls Dream About?" Is the internet pornography not the "best enemy of sexual freedom", and what are the consequences of the new demands that society places on young women today .
- The Triads, powerful Chinese mafias, are expanding their criminal networks all over the world - And getting involved in geopolitics. A brilliant investigation.
- After the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949, Mao Tsetung established a system of labor camps for systematic repression, known as Laogai, an abbreviation for "reform through labor". In such camps, forced labor and physical and mental torture were used to bring about a so-called mental reform, re-education in the spirit of the Chinese Communist Party. Millions of Chinese were affected. Many were executed. In hundreds of camps, the Party took advantage of the prisoners' free labor to build the economy. Self-criticism and denunciation were often the only way to escape martyrdom. Successive waves of purges culminated in the Cultural Revolution, which saw massive human rights abuses, political assassinations, massacres, and exiles in remote parts of the country. Using unreleased archive footage, the documentary tells the story of the invention, development and improvement of China's totalitarian system of surveillance and repression up to the present day, never told before.
- Retrospective in archives of cultural movements carried by young people since the post-war period, from cinema to music and literature.
- After a summer of 2018 marked by heatwaves, fires and the sensational resignation of Nicolas Hulot, a group of young people, distraught by the inaction of governments in the face of the climate crisis, decided to join forces. A HQ, La Base, is rented in the heart of Paris. In germ since the COP21, an informal international climate links different European protest movements: Extinction Rebellion, Ende Gelände, Alternatiba, ANV-COP21. After a first victory - the petition called "The Affair of the Century" and its 2 million signatures in fifteen days - the activists of La Base organize 134 stalls of portraits of Emmanuel Macron in town halls. This is their first major act of civil disobedience.
- Former French Presidents and Prime Ministers were "at the heart of power." They tell for the first time how these crises are happening at the Elysée since 1958.
- Lucid, indignant, committed: for a growing fraction of today's youth, it is urgent to act. Against the deadly lifestyle of past generations which precipitated the climate crisis; against social inequalities and discrimination, against a globalized economy. ZDF journalist Aline Abboud gives a voice to young Europeans who are committed to moving the lines. In France, she meets Priscillia Ludosky, figure of the "yellow vests" movement, or Assa Traoré, anti-racist activist. In Poland, she talks to progressive, pro-LGBT activists like artist Daniel Rycharski. In Germany, she meets a pressure group which intends to influence the institutions in order to make their voice heard.
- Classified as a defense secret, nuclear security today remains the opaque zone of an industry exposed to the risk of terrorism. Captivating as well as alarming, this international survey reveals enormous flaws in this area.
- Two fearless female reporters investigate the way the Swiss company Glencore, helped by European development money, deprives Zambia of its copper and ruins the health of the Zambians who work for them and/or live by their chemical plants.
- Edible forests: a solution to climate change? Fabrice Desjours grows regenerative forests where everything that grows can be eaten.
- 2011– 1h 17mTV Episode
- For long, Qatar was nicknamed "The land forgotten by Gods" but it currently occupies an essential place within the community of nations. By what means - fair or foul - has this tiny country, stuck between two giants like Saudi Arabia and Iran, managed to accomplish such a formidable feat?
- Hub of jihadists in exile and patron of the Muslim Brotherhood, ally of the West as well as supporter of its most violent detractors, Qatar has become a master in the art of duplicity. Its commitment to the Arab Spring, when Al Jazeera 24-hour channel, a Qatari state-funded broadcaster in Doha, continuously broadcast the series of anti-government protests and uprisings in the Middle-East, revealed his disconcerting diplomacy and raised deep concern. Is Qatar a dangerous sorcerer's apprentice?