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
1-26 of 26
- In Victorian England, the independent and headstrong Bathsheba Everdene attracts three very different suitors: Gabriel Oak, a sheep farmer; Frank Troy, a reckless Sergeant; and William Boldwood, a prosperous and mature bachelor.
- Bathsheba Everdene, a willful, flirtatious young woman, unexpectedly inherits a large farm and is romantically pursued by three very different men.
- A vain, pretty girl has recently taken over her uncle's farm. Her independent, naïve personality leaves her torn between the three men who wish to marry her.
- A girl farmer weds a faithless sergeant who is killed by her suitor, and realises she loves the bailiff.
- This promotional short film for the feature Far from the Madding Crowd (1967) takes us to the many locations in Dorset County, England, where the movie was filmed. It was here that 'Thomas Hardy' lived and was inspired to write the novel upon which the film is based. Only the film's star, Julie Christie, makes comments on the production.
- The day is the hottest on record, our bachelor hero, with all possible means of securing relief and comfort at his command, is sweltering in the seclusion of his luxurious apartments. Fuming and fretting, he keeps his distracted valet on the jump to devise new means of relief. Relief comes with the morning mail. The enticing "Hillcrest" prospectus catches his eye and rivets his attention. Visions of purling brooks and quiet nooks in sheltered glades are conjured up by his imagination. It takes but a moment to decide. Orders are given, trunks are packed, and our fat hero is whirled away towards the Promised Land. Arriving at the station he is met by the landlord, a typical "rube," who piles him and his numerous trunks into a ramshackle rig and they start for "Hillcrest." His sad disillusionment dates from the moment that fearful trip begins. Over dusty roads filled with countless "thank-you-marms" that are responsible for a number of extremely comical breakdowns, they at last reach their destination, which furnishes the second chapter of his disillusionment. His adventures in the summer boarding country are portrayed by laughable scenes of a 6 x 8 bedroom under the skylight, of an encounter at the stile with two old maids, of the fall on the hill, of the ludicrous swing accident, not to speak of the depressing hammock incident or the fall into the brook while fishing. One by one the visions created by reading the attractively worded prospectus are shattered and our dispirited hero longs for a return to the city, and "the mad'ding crowd."
- Rabeya - a psychiatrist, is touring rural Bengal with Satish as a guide. A riot breaks out in the vicinity, and at once they are targeted.
- 2021– 32mPodcast Episode
- 2014– 41mPodcast Episode
- 2021–Podcast Episode
- 2021– 2h 10mPodcast Episode
- 2021– 2h 27mPodcast Episode
- 2021– 1h 59mPodcast Episode
- 2021– 1h 34mPodcast Episode
- 2021– 2h 3mPodcast Episode
- 2021– 1h 59mPodcast Episode
- 2021– 1h 58mPodcast Episode
- 2005–TV EpisodeInterviews with the cast and filmmakers of Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015); Far from the Madding Crowd (2015); Just Before I Go (2014).
- 2013–201629mTV EpisodeFor this grand tour, Paul Murton is exploring the Isle of Mull and its satellite islands to discover why they have become boltholes from the hustle and bustle of the modern world. Beginning his journey on the tidal island of Erraid, which inspired famous Scottish writer Robert Louis Stevenson, Paul is then island-hopping to beautiful Ulva, the final resting place of Lachlan MacQuarrie, one of the first governors of New South Wales. MacQuarrie is known as the father of Australia, but Ulva is where this celebrated Scot was born and it is where he chose to be buried. Leaving peaceful Ulva behind, Paul heads off to explore Mull itself and is given a whistle-stop tour of the island by rally driver Louise Thomas, who regularly competes in the world-famous Mull Rally. After seeing Mull at breakneck speed, it's time for some tranquillity and Paul travels to the mysterious little island of Inch Kenneth. This is where some of the earliest kings of Scotland are buried, but in more recent times Inch Kenneth was owned by the aristocratic and eccentric English family, the Mitfords, and Paul discovers the island has a dark secret. This is where Unity Mitford, who was a Nazi sympathiser, was hidden by her family when, distraught at the news that Britain had gone to war with her beloved Germany, she shot herself. The badly injured Unity was taken to Inch Kenneth to recuperate and hide from the world. To raise his spirits Paul heads to his final destination, the beautiful and remote Treshnish Islands, where he experiences a spot of puffin therapy.
- 2003–TV Episode