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1-44 of 44
- Stephen King has been one of the world's most successful bestselling authors for decades. How can the success of his horror novels be explained? Undoubtedly with the inventiveness and effectiveness of his literature. But what else is behind the longevity of its success? On the basis of rarely shown interviews with the author, the documentary explores why his horror stories touch the reader so deeply and how the author succeeded in creating such a gigantic work over the years, the intensity and sensitivity of which makes it part of world literature.
- In 30 years of a deeply committed career and 50 roles, Denzel Washington, double-Oscar winner, placed the figure of the Black man in all its complexity at the heart of the American paradoxes: from Black activist, rebel soldier to gangster torn between violence and charity. Voted best actor of the 21st century by the New York Times a few months ago, Denzel Washington, 65, has risen to the top of American cinema. As an Actor, director and producer, he has shaken up a "color line" as immutable as it is subtle. Often identified with his characters, he reveals himself to be disconcerting and paradoxical. As if he were holding up a mirror to America in which all of its contradictions and failings were reflected. A documentary that chronicles the extraordinary career of the world-renowned African-American actor.
- Portrait of Cyril Collard, French film director who died of AIDS in 1993 at the age of 35. He is famous for his movie "Savage Nights", which was seen by several million viewers and won Cesar awards just a few days after his death.
- When 850 000 bitcoins -half a billion dollars- disappear from Mt. Gox in Tokyo, its unconventional CEO, Mark Karpelès, is arrested. After a year, he's finally released for lack of evidence. Mark Karpelès is now free and breaks its silence.
- They learned how to play tennis in one of America's most dangerous ghettos... became the first and second tennis players worldwide and forged an unparalleled record. Black women, sculptural and powerful, embodying new codes, the Williams sisters navigated through sexism and racism, became world icons, and changed tennis forever.
- Takeshi Kitano is an international icon known as actor and multi-award-winning filmmaker, but the former street kid from Tokyo close to the Yakuza has also an double personality as a crazy TV star and political satirist who blasted taboos.
- Hooded and dressed in black, they go to the front line, risking their lives, during the worst crises that the state faces: they are the men of the Raid, these police officers that the government sends to deal with hostage-takers, criminals and terrorists. Julian Bugier tells the story of this elite unit, since its first intervention in 1985, just 35 years ago, under the orders of Commissioner Broussard, a police legend. For 120 minutes, the RAID police officers, great leaders, men and women in the field, take us back to the time when they followed Yvan Colonna into the Corsican scrub, when their apartments were transformed into a war zone, and when they spent intense nights negotiating.
- It centers on all of the complexities of UAE politics through the portrayal of the president of the United Arab Emirates.
- Guy Maddin, who has been nicknamed the Canadian David Lynch is doubtlessly one of the last remaining Magus of cinema.
- 2001– 52mTV Episode
- Each year in France, 60,000 hectares of farmland are transformed into hypermarkets, football stadiums, office buildings or parking lots.
- 2016– 1h 30mTV Episode
- 2016– 1h 30mTV Episode
- 2016– 1h 30mTV Episode
- Five police officers in the field talk about the violence of their daily lives, without taboos or self-censorship. They tell how a chase leads to a fight, how a simple demonstration turns into a real battlefield, or how, sometimes, a banal police intervention ends in tragedy. Driven by an ideal, these police officers are subjected to fatigue, to the pressure of numbers, to a work rhythm increased tenfold with the state of emergency, but also to increasingly tense relations with certain civilians.