Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-100 of 161
- A young, devout Catholic woman discovers that she was accidentally artificially inseminated.
- A rancher, his clairvoyant wife, and their family face turbulent years in South America in this adaptation of Isabel Allende's best-seller.
- Chile 1973 is ruled by the dictator Pinochet. The wealthy don't see the violence, terror, executions etc. including Irene. She's engaged to an officer in the fascist military. She meets Francisco who opens her eyes to truth and love.
- Making a satire out of the entire Late Night Show concept Scotsman Craig Ferguson hosts his show with a robot skeleton and a "horse" as his sidekicks. The show features the stereotypical parts of a Late Show, but all in their own, raw way.
- Your one-stop shop for all the late-breaking news in our nation and all over the world.
- The news show that does personal interest pieces. Anything from interviews with actors, political figures, athletes, musicians, costume designers, fashion designers, restaurant owners, charity heads, kids with special talents
- This is a romantic historical drama based on the true story of the first woman "conquistador" who went to the South American land that would become Chile, and helped to form the city of Santiago. It is based on a 2006 novel by Isabel Allende.
- ITV's long-running arts series presented by Melvyn Bragg.
- Arts documentary series with concerts and experimental dramatizations.
- Charlie Rose interviews noteworthy people in fields including politics and government, business and economics, science and technology, media, sports and the arts.
- Long-running German TV show airing in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. In this self-proclaimed "greatest European TV show" ordinary people try daring or even funny bets. A celebrity is challenged to guess of the person is able to do it.
- A diverse panel of experts on various social, political, economic, and legal issues that are key to Detroit's turnaround.
- The summaries of the greatest novels
- From the director of 'THE SECRET' comes this unparalleled and life-changing film about the astonishing power and intelligence of your heart.
- Journalist Amy Goodman hosts this independent news program which features international journalists, grassroots leaders, independent analysts, as well as ordinary people directly affected by world events and U.S. policy.
- A look at the life and work of author Amy Tan.
- After decades of fascist rule in Chile, Patricio Guzman returns to his country to screen his documentary, Battle of Chile, which until the time of the filming was banned by authorities. His audience, a new generation of Chileans who remember little of the revolution and ensuing coup reflect on their experience of watching the film after so many years of suppression.
- The magazine shows the latest news from Germany and around the world as well as detailed background information on events in politics, business, sport and culture.
- An exploration of the environmental movement - grassroots and global activism spanning fifty years from conservation to climate change.
- Called "one of the last bastions of serious journalism on TV" by the Austin American-Statesman, The PBS weekly newsmagazine NOW engages viewers with documentary segments and insightful interviews that probe the most important issues facing democracy, including media policy, corporate accountability, civil liberties, the environment, money in politics, and foreign affairs. Hosted by award-winning veteran journalist David Brancaccio, NOW goes beyond the noisy churn of the news cycle and gives viewers the context to explore their relationship with the larger world. In an era where commercial values in journalism risk overwhelming democratic values and corporate interests can prevail over the public interest, NOW continues to stand apart as what The Christian Science Monitor called the "one program going against the grain."
- Apostrophes is a French literary television program produced and hosted by Bernard Pivot, broadcast live on Antenne 2 between January 10, 1975, and June 22, 1990, every Friday evening at 9:40 p.m. Defined by Bernard Pivot as a "magazine of ideas based on books", the program is gradually becoming a cultural magazine devoted to editorial news, if not to literature taken in its broadest sense. The program offered open discussions between four or five authors around a common subject, but also individual interviews (called "Grands Entretiens") with a single author when the latter had acquired an important place in the academic or literary field. In fifteen years of existence, Apostrophes has become the emblematic literary program of French television at this time, almost in reverse of the initial project. It owes this to a combination of favorable factors: advantageous programming at prime time, continuous support from the directors of the Antenne 27 channel, and an almost new French audiovisual landscape when the program was created. The personality of its presenter, the initial choice of the format of the program (debate around a theme that changes each week), and the heterogeneity of its speakers also play a preponderant role in the recognition of Apostrophes with the general public, book professionals but also literary "all-Paris".
- Reality changes depending on how you see it. CQC has its own way of seeing things. "Caiga Quien Caiga" is a weekly news roundup that takes a humorous and ironic approach to reporting current affairs, show business and sports. A program that laughs at reality and takes information to limits beyond what is expected. Each week, direct and live from the studio, a trio of hosts presents the most original stories to show reality in a very distinct way to the everyday newscasts we are used to. Its reporters - those in charge of going out on the street - are willing to do anything to get a surprising story. They are not afraid of anybody, not politicians, presidents or film stars. They always ask the least convenient and most uncomfortable questions, provoking unexpected and funny reactions from celebrities.
- Series of talks about technology, entertainment, and design.
- Water: The Drop of Life brings into focus the realization that for millions of people worldwide, our global well is running dry. We must face the problem and take up the challenge, for ourselves and our future generations.
- Stern hours talk show.
- TV Series
- Broadcast television coverage of the Torino 2006: XX Olympic Winter Games, an international multi-sport competition that took place in and around Turin, Piedmont, Italy (aka Torino Italy) from 10 February 2006 through 26 February 2006.
- Weaving together the lives of different people from different countries who all share a quest for citizenship by choice, not birthright, this documentary travels from a citizenship class in San Jose to a naturalization ceremony in Iraq. Along the way, there's unprecedented access to the United States Citizenship and Immigration Service, revealing the complex process up-close, including a marriage interview and the one-on-one Citizenship Exam. How many amendments are in the Constitution? To become an American, not knowing is not an option. Contemporary stories of struggle and success are combined with insightful interviews from notable naturalized citizens like Fareed Zakaria, Alan Cumming, David Rakoff and Isabel Allende.
- Aspects - the culture magazine.
- Weekly book and literature review programme, hosted by Isabella Miehe-Renard, featuring interviews with Danish and international authors, and the latest news from the world of litterature. Selected episodes, entitled "Bestseller Samtalen", are devoted to a single author and contains a full half-hour interview.
- A documentary that explores how seven remarkable people embrace their pain, learn to live with their loss and now engage in life with more compassion, courage and awareness. The personal and moving stories include those of author, Isabel Allende; Reverend Cecil Williams; filmmaker, Lee Mun Wah and Zen Monk/Vietnam Veteran, Claude AnShin Thomas. With courage these people invite the viewer to open to the pain of grief and discover for themselves the extraordinary opportunities their own losses may reveal.
- The host conducts in-depth interviews with famous people.
- A dynamic documentary on Latin America's most renowned poet, Pablo Neruda (1904-1973). Neruda was a public poet, statesman, activist, and Nobel Laureate who attained mythic stature in his lifetime. An incurable romantic, incorrigible womanizer, and unrepentant militant communist, Neruda's contradictions found poetic expression in an aching lyricism and potent political verse. He invented a new poetic voice, distinctively Americano, rooted in Latin America's native cultures and untamed geography. Neruda wrested poetry from the rarified atmosphere of the salon and gave it to the people, a communal voice rooted in oral tradition, fired by raw passion and the struggle for justice. "Poetry is like bread," he wrote. "It should be shared by all, by scholars and peasants, by all our vast, incredible, extraordinary family of Man." Compelling biography represents an idea larger than its individual subject-in the case of Neruda, the theme of el deber del poeta, the poet's calling. For Neruda, poetry was a rallying cry for the social function of art, a way of bearing witness to suffering and injustice. Chile's tumultuous history shaped Neruda, and he became a major player in its ongoing political struggles with military dictatorship, fascism, national liberation, and U.S. intervention. The poet lived through some of the most significant events of the 20th century, and his writing is a chronicle of the times, poetically expressed, from the Spanish Civil War to the Stalin purges, the Cold War, and the 1973 military coup that toppled Chile's democratically elected government. Neruda reclaimed "America" in the name of the entire continent and redefined the cultural landscape. Pablo Neruda. Prensete. creates an intimate portrait of one of Latin America's most colorful characters, and introduce a broad North American audience to the power of Neruda's poetry. Still, the film is unflinching when it calls for criticism of Neruda and his controversial acts; it does question Neruda's self-appointed "people's poet" status... It links the meaning of his public life to the state of our world now.
- A film diary by an exiled Chilean woman adapting to life in Canada with her mother and son.
- President Salvador Allende's topple from Chile's unstable government and the CIA's involvement in the September Coup that would turn the South American socialist country into a dictatorship.
- A documentary series that tells stories of people who have entered the world of filmmaking using different movie locations for the purpose. The series has been to Berlin, London, Rome, Naples, Barcelona, Los Angeles, Toronto, Seville and Tallinn. Some of the names featured as interviewees are Juliette Binoche, Stellan Skarsgard, Julie Delpy, Samantha Morton, Andre Holland, Dana Brunetti, Michael McKell, Elena Anaya, Pierfrancesco Favino, Liv Tyler, Rupert Everett, Tom Wlaschiha and many other composers, cinematographers and directors. Every episode tells a different story of a person who has dedicated their career to the world of show business.
- The story of San Francisco's oldest neighborhood, from Native American village, to Spanish Mission, to Gold Rush boomtown, to the dynamic changes of the 1990's. The documentary follows the neighborhood's many incarnations as a landing place for new immigrants, including its important role in the Irish and labor history of the city, through its emergence after World War II as one of the country's most vibrant centers of Latino culture and identity.
- The making of "The house of the Spirits", based on Isabel Allende's novel.
- A full-length documentary motion picture exploring the history and enduring legacy of Latin America's Nueva Cancion song movement.
- Daily news program airing twice daily, with an emphasis on studio interviews and discussions.
- The big read.
- A NEW WORLD: After the death of her mother, Inés Suárez lives in Plasencia together with her sister Asuncion and her authoritarian grandfather. There she meets Juan de Malaga, a merchant with whom she falls in love and with whom she marries after escaping from the family home and traveling to Seville, a lively and prosperous city, gateway to the 'New World.'
- THE CONQUEST OF A DREAM: After her journey through the jungle, Inés arrives in Cuzco Peru exhausted and devastated to discover that Juan has died. With nothing and no one to tie her to the New World, Inés arranges an audience with Francisco Pizarro, Marquis of Peru, to ask him for a ticket back to Spain. But her desire to return from her will have to wait until the Carnival celebrations are over and ships are available.
- THE PROMISED LAND: Inés, Valdivia and the rest of the Spanish expedition finally leave for Chile. But to reach the 'Promised Land' they will first have to cross the Atacama desert, an extensive sandy terrain that threatens to squeeze their resistance capacity to the maximum: not only will they have to face the inclemency of the area, but before them the threat of the Mapuche will also loom.