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- Acclaimed writer and historian Deborah E. Lipstadt must battle for historical truth to prove the Holocaust actually occurred when David Irving, a renowned denier, sues her for libel.
- Couples split up after a comment at an LA dinner party sets up arguments about how truthful partners are in their relationships.
- Michael and Sara end their turbulent love affair to avoid destruction, with Michael calling Sara his 'sickness'. Sara, or Loon, as her friends call her, tries to start anew and move on from the troubled relationship.
- The Busty Cops are back in action. This time they have to help the quaint, humble island natives who are in danger of losing their sacred statue of perpetual orgasms. They fly to Hawaii so that they can have as much sex as possible before solving the case.
- Stephen Downing is in prison, classed as IDOM, In Denial of Murder. Downing maintains his innocence for the murder of a young woman, Wendy Sewell, in the village of Bakewell in 1973. Don Hale is the crusading journalist determined to prove Downing's innocence.
- A man who claims to have been abducted by aliens is also abducted by a top secret government agency, the Majestic Group, who want him to attempt to communicate with the only surviving alien from a UFO shot down by the Air Force. Telepathically, the alien tells him it must be returned to its ship, where it will reveal a secret vital to the future of the planet.
- Filmmaker Joe Berlinger meets with historians and scholars to discuss the Armenian Genocide and the continuing denial by the Turkish government of it ever happening.
- Follows a genius programmer who sacrifices everything in his personal and professional life to build a supercomputer of unprecedented power.
- Featuring Julian Assange, George Clooney, and brutal witness accounts, this film explores the controversy surrounding the Armenian genocide and persecution of Middle Eastern Christians, including the U.S. politicians who deny it occurred.
- This documentary aims to demystify the controversial phenomenon of UFOs and offers explosive information about some of the biggest cover-ups of the last century. From Roswell to Area 51, former government officials, astronauts and military experts offer firsthand accounts of their experiences with the unknown.
- Beautiful Mildred Hucks is in love with young Lyman Webb, but her mother is determined to marry her off to an elderly millionaire. When the Spanish-American War breaks out in 1898, Lyman joins Teddy Roosevelt's Rough Riders and goes off to fight in Cuba. He writes to Mildred, but her mother intercepts the letters and makes sure Mildred doesn't see them. Her mother's efforts to destroy Mildred's and Lyman's relationship finally pay off--but have far-reaching consequences.
- When a seemingly picture perfect relationship begins to unravel, one man must make a choice between the woman of his dreams, and his reality. The result is a raw glimpse into how loneliness and regret can test the limits of one's sanity.
- Investigating the history and modern face of Holocaust denial.
- An examination of the devastating effects of multifocal pollution on sea life and human health in surrounding communities of the East Coast and Gulf Coast regions of Florida.
- Before Christine Hallquist became the first Transgender candidate for Governor in the USA, she was a CEO fighting climate change. Denial tells exactly the kind of complex, deeply personal story about climate change we need at this moment.
- An unprecedented and unflinching look at how the citizens of South Africa are living with the AIDS epidemic, given the climate of governmental confusion and neglect.
- Just another day in the lives of one happily(?) married couple.
- In the early 20th Century, tobacco merchants were unaware of the danger of their increasingly popular product. Smoke & Mirrors documents the rise of the cigarette, and the tobacco industry's subsequent attempts to conceal its emerging link with cancer and other smoking-related illnesses. Throughout the 1940's, the scientific case against the cigarette was building. However, despite the evidence that tobacco was a major cause of disease and death among smokers, tobacco companies began conducting successful campaigns of misinformation designed to weave cigarettes into the social fabric of America by emphasizing the "glarmous" and "sophisticated" side of smoking. Today fifty years of documented denial is finally coming back to haunt the industry. Smoke & Mirrors examines this sordid past, and illuminates the issues that threaten tobacco's future.This video is divided into two parts for your viewing convenience.
- On one hot summer night; 20 year veteran police officer, Peter Gilchrist, is faced with a shoot don't shoot situation.
- Natalie Oren oscillates between her desire for motherhood and the necessitated care of her dementia-diagnosed mother in the midst of financial and personal hardships which render the simultaneous pursuit impossible.
- Short
- A woman goes to extreme lengths to avoid reality, dragging her family with her.
- In July 1995, forces of the Army of the Republika Srpska, the VRS, invaded the town of Srebrenica, in eastern Bosnia and Herzegovina. In a few horrific days, more than 8,000 Bosnian Muslim boys and men were taken to places of detention, abused, tortured and then executed. As their bodies fell into mass graves, the machinery of denial of those crimes was set into motion. The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia-commonly referred to as the ICTY, investigated, prosecuted and passed judgement on those crimes. This film tells that story.
- An evangelical organization, The Cornwall Alliance, is cultivating the ideology that humanity's future is doomed in the eyes of god if we step towards a greener future. Scientists, economists, and other experts uncover a complex web of financial and political ties to fossil fuel companies, revealing the organization's hidden agenda.
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- Defined by a tragic twist of fate where everything is lost, Liz and Jack struggle through separate pain cycles. One has come to terms, while the other avoids the truth. On this very morning the tension between the married couple reaches a climax, testing the time of struggle and defining their moment of loss. Facing the pain will provide a palette of different colors in their lives.
- Mike, a highly decorated police detective, was never good at balancing his professional life with his family life. No matter his love for his wife and young son, his actions only drove a wedge into his relationships. After losing his job and his marriage...evidence arises that Mike may be involved in a series of violent murders. With his former partner, Bill, who was also his best friend, hot on his trail...Mike tries to put together the broken pieces of his life. As the clues unfold...Mike becomes more uncertain of his own innocence...is he, or is he not responsible for these brutal killings? And at what lengths will he go to to find out?
- ABC News' Steve Osunsami explores the rise of diabetic amputations, particularly in Black and Brown communities, while also examining preventative care, including the use of Ozempic and Mounjaro.
- On the 10th of December, 1981, according to a 1992 investigation commissioned by the UN, units of the Atlacatl battalion, an elite battalion of the armed forces of El Salvador, along with a few other Salvadoran miiltary units, entered the town of El Mozote, El Salvador, and executed virtually the entire population, an estimated 794 people - men, women, and children; an exhumation in one building found 131 victims under the age of twelve, several infants between six months and a year. Witnesses of this event, however, survived. A very very lucky, very very few fled. Patry and Lacourse' film interviews two of the survivors, and tells the story of the massacre, in their words, besides interviewing a number of other people connected with the event, and with an alleged subsequent cover-up by the US administration at the time, allegedly related to congressional hearings approving further aid to the government of El Salvador. Interviewed at length: Rufina Almaya. Almaya was living in El Mozote at the time of the massacre; she reports seeing the military cut off her husband's head when he tried to escape; she escaped by kneeling down to pray, then creeping away through the bushes to hide until dark. Wilson Guevera Berera. Berera was born in El Mozote, and was eight years old at the time of the massacre. He reports that after witnessing other children being killed, he ran for it; shots fired at him missed. An unnamed civilian who reports he was working as a support worker for the military company which entered El Mozote. He reports witnessing rapes and executions, and the burning of the church, the children, inside, screaming. Raymond Bonner, former New York Times reporter. Bonner visited the site shortly after the massacre, and broke the story in the US on January 27, 1982. Later, in the face of official denials from the government of the US (the official line was there had been no massacre, that this had been a confrontation between the military and a guerilla force, this while aid packages for El Salvador were before the US Congress), Bonner's coverage was widely criticized as 'credulous'. The Times removed Bonner from the assignment in August 1982. Declassified documents later, however, confirmed the State Department had reason at the time to suspect the massacre had occurred. Also interviewed: Elliott Abrams, Assistant US Secretary of State for Human Rights in 1982. Lieutenant Ricardo Castro, former Salvadoran miltary, exiled to the US. David Morris, US military advisor to El Salvador, 1980-1981. Morris took a team into El Salvador to train the Atlacatl battalion in 1980. Mercedes Doretti, from an Argentine team of forensic anthropologists, who conducted a forensic exhumation on the site in 1992.
- A year after a military coup rocked the island of Madagascar in March 2009, deposing its president Marc Ravolomanana and installing an inexperienced former DJ, Andry Rajoelina (TGV) in his place, the country of 20 million has finally reached tipping point. With its government bankrupt, its donor funds drying up, and its economy and infrastructure in tatters, the urgency of legitimacy through elections is the last remaining hope that could halt the country erupting into civil war. Promises by Rajoelina to abolish political autocracy and government corruption have proven spurious, relations between the international community, including the US, EU, AU and SADC have reached critical mass, and opposition parties are now consolidating their power, vying for a place on the political stage in the upcoming elections. With no rule of law and no enforcement, the country is a ticking time bomb poised to implode. While Madagascar celebrates 50 years of independence from France, the country remains mired in economic crisis and political uncertainty over who is legitimately leading the nation of 20 million.
- Short film about the denial stage of grief, made as part of the "Roger Corman Quarantine Film Festival" during the COVID19. The rules of the Corman Challenge were: make a 2 min film, at home, using only a mobile phone
- A young woman stuck in the first stage of grief is visited by a pair of mysterious characters who help her come to terms with her husband's untimely death.