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
1-50 of 106
- Camera crews follow police officers while they work.
- A battle-hardened American political consultant is sent to help re-elect a controversial president in Bolivia, where she must compete with a long-term rival working for another candidate.
- At the University of Buenos Aires, a rivalry arises between two Philosophy teachers for a professorship position.
- In Bolivia, Butch Cassidy (now calling himself James Blackthorn) pines for one last sight of home, an adventure that aligns him with a young robber and makes the duo a target for gangs and lawmen alike.
- In 1967, Ernesto 'Che' Guevara leads a small partisan army to fight an ill-fated revolutionary guerrilla war in Bolivia, South America.
- Maria Francisca, a wealthy young heiress and her friend Mariana De Castro, a young protestant widow, are accused of witchcraft and taken before the Spanish Inquisition of Lima, Peru.
- Yahel and her companions, Judith and Magdalena are on their way to a market where they end up confronting the Romans and the religious authorities. What begins as a long walk to the market turns into a cruel journey to the cross.
- A road trip across five countries to explore the social and political movements as well as the mainstream media's misperception of South America while interviewing seven of its elected presidents.
- Two cousins began to discover their sexuality together in adolescence and they reunite after 10 years: he only recently returned to bachelorhood, and she returned from Buenos Aires, where she opted to specialize in Sexology.
- Based in the story by Robert Louis Stevenson, "Olalla" tells the story of a gothic and decadent family of genetic vampires who need human blood to survive, and where incest is the only way to maintain the family line.
- In this artistic rendering of De Sade's classic novel, Justine endures extreme torture and violation at the hands of the Marquis De Sade's disciples of pain in a number of perverse practices illustrating that virtue is no match for vice.
- Rusty Young, author of the best-selling novel Marching Powder, returns to Bolivia to uncover the brutal realities of the international cocaine trade.
- Exploration of love and relationships in contempòrary Bolivia.
- An unemployed man starts a private car service and takes an older Arab man, Jalil, on a long distance journey from Buenos Aires to La Paz in Bolivia. Non-stop arguing during the ride changes their lives.
- Official music video for "La La La" by Naughty Boy featuring Sam Smith.
- Based on the true story of the Klarsfelds, a Franco-German couple who devoted themselves to bringing Nazi war criminals to justice. Their pursuit of Klaus Barbie, the "Butcher of Lyon," takes them to South America, where he has found refuge. After 12 years of investigations, undercover work and battles with authorities, they succeed in having him captured and brought to justice.
- This is the chronicle of a unique expedition in the world: its objective is to climb the highest mountain in America, Mount Aconcagua. The surprising thing is that the expedition is made up of six Bolivian indigenous women.
- An imprisoned aristocrat purchases condemned women.
- Faced with climate change, many countries have embarked on the energy transition. Since the COP21 in 2015, which set demanding targets for reducing greenhouse gases, green energies have been on the rise. The electric car has thus become the mascot of this revolution. But manufacturers remain discreet about the carbon footprint of their cars marked "zero emission". Because not only do they consume electricity that is not always clean, but they also consume rare metals such as cobalt or lithium, the extraction of which causes havoc on the other side of the world. In China, for example, champion of rare metals, in Heilongjiang province, a carpet of toxic dust covers agricultural regions.
- Based on the classic fairytale "La Barbe Bleue" (Bluebeard, 1697) by Charles Perrault, author of Cinderella, which tells the story of a wealthy and feared aristocrat with a blue beard who has the bad habit of killing his wives.
- The filmmaker's famous father kept a secret that almost destroyed him. In this searingly honest meld of personal and historical, Weidlinger tells the epic story of his family across three continents, from Kristallnacht to the Atomic Age.
- In a post-apocalyptic era, somewhere in the desert highlands, the protagonists, a young couple played by Peter Lanzani and Juana Burga, live in a refugee camp during the Water War. Upon learning of the young woman's pregnancy, they decide to escape to the sea in search of a better future for their son. For this they begin a journey through kilometers of desert terrain and devastated by industrial exploitation, meeting a war correspondent in the middle of the trip.
- In Bolivia, the glaciers are melting. Samuel, an old ski lift operator, is looking out of a window on the rooftop of the world. Through generations his family lived and worked in the snowy mountains, but now snow fails. While scientists are discussing and measuring ominous changes Samuel honors the ancient mountain spirits. Clouds continue to drift by.
- Meet some of the colorful characters who bring pride and passion to the global profession of shoe-shining.
- By building a personal museum in a storage unit and a spaceship to travel into the unknown, 36-year-old Amaru prepares himself and us for his death.
- Murder, Mysticism and Mystery The tale has all the ingredients of a classic suspense and more... A beautiful girl is found in the Valley of the Moon with her throat slashed, a homeless derelict is laying, passed out, besides her body. He'a accused of her murder. Case closed. Or is it? An expatriate lawyer is called on tho defend the accused and the cast of characters he encounters are a bizarre lot: a Ch'makani, or man of the dark, who can communicate with the dead' the dead girl's beautiful twin sister, an American exchange student, exiled by his parents to Bolivia for computer hacking, the lawyer's ex wife, and a mystery woman. They all combine for a steamy, exciting and suspense packed story
- Ernesto Che Guevara - possibly the single most iconic figure of the 20th century. More than just a handsome face on a million t-shirts, he remains a symbol of revolutionary struggle against imperialism and injustice. 50 years ago, Che Guevara emerged from the Cuban Revolution as the quintessential guerrilla fighter and eight years later, that's how he died. Last Autumn, Joe Higgins set out to discover what this man - whose courage and integrity he has always admired - means to the people of Che's homeland today. 40 years after Guevara's death, Latin America is in the midst of sweeping political change. After decades of ruthless dictatorships, a powerful democratic Left has emerged, echoing Che's ideals of unity and independence. In 1952, when a young medical student set out to explore a continent on the back of a motorcycle, what he saw changed his life. But how much has changed for the people whose freedom he fought and died for?"
- How far would you go to reach heaven? Santa, a young indigenous girl, embarks on a rollercoaster journey to take her mother out of a life of hardship and into eternal paradise.
- When war broke out, a group of soccer players changed the playing field for the battlefield to win one of the most remembered battles in the history of Bolivia. Based on real events, FUERTES tells a glorious episode of courage and passion.
- The Fighting Cholitas is a documentary short about a group of bold and fierce female Bolivian wrestlers. These indigenous Indian women jump into the ring every Sunday in their traditional vibrant mulitlayered skirts and perform the acrobatic maneuvers of Lucha Libre (a blend of Mexican and American professional wrestling). The Fighting Cholitas documents this weekly fight and goes behind the scenes to find out who these women are and what draws them to this unusual sport.
- Due to different circumstances several kids work in the streets of La Paz (Bolivia). While a group of Catholic priests help them they are endangered by organ thieves and drug dealers. When one of the children is kidnapped and the perpetrators evade the Bolivian police the Blessed Virgen Mary intervenes unfolding miraculous events.
- Equal parts documentary, road film, and ethnographic recording, Collasuyo makes most sense as a symphony of the nation of Bolivia.
- Bolivia houses one of the wildest prisons in the whole world, the infamous "Penal de San Pedro." In the early 2000's, Rusty Young, an Australian journalist and writer, paid to live inside the prison as a "tourist" and wrote a best-seller book called "Marching Powder," a whistleblowing story about many of the irregularities and illegal things that go on inside the prison. 12 years later, he returns to Bolivia with a crew from Channel 7 Australia's star show "Sunday Night." In this special piece hosted by Denham Hitchcock, Rusty Young will try to re-enter the prison in order to give the world an update of what it's like to live inside San Pedro. Through his book and many interviews, Rusty has gained many foes in the Bolivian judicial and penitentiary systems as well as inmates in San Pedro; his life could be in danger by crossing back into this odd bolivian prison.
- Carlos Borjas plots to gain control of The Federation of Drivers of Bolivia, this meaning he is willing to go against Roberto, his close friend and the leader of the Federation. Meanwhile, the country is in conflict, which is causing rapid transitions that are making contraband a depleting option. Nevertheless, Margot- Roberto's wife- pressures him to block the streets and use his power in her favor. Her greatest wishes are about to be achieved. But, what is maintained well hidden is that every one of them holds a traitor within, that of their most intimate desires, which fools them into thinking that their ambitions can take them further than they actually can.
- In an emotional short tale of self-sacrifice, one girl will give more than herself for a bit of hope. After finding out that her father had an accident and is unable to provide for the family, Amalia feels the obligation to go to America in search for a better life. She does not classify for a visa. Therefore, she aims to find one in the black market. Is she tough enough?
- What can represent the confinement for a person. The emotions, changes, uncertainties and traumas that are generated in a space/situation limit. Place from where a particular form is constructed to see the life and the freedom.
- Filmmaker/Sailor Lee Stanley sails around the world encountering people that have "cut the ties" with society as we know it and started a new life or career in some of the most beautiful and secluded places.
- A micro-budget, independent road movie about two brothers racing across Bolivia towards the border with Chile during a national crisis in 2003.
- The film narrates the intervention of the Bolivian Army in a small peasants village on the Bolivian highlands.