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1-50 of 2,304
- Five-part docuseries about two-time F1 world champion Fernando Alonso, who is expecting to return to Formula One next season.
- A deadbeat travel agent is convinced by a goldfish to break him out of the office he's been stuck in for years.
- A ranch owner fires his ranch hands and brings in women to replace them. The owner's daughter wants the male hands back and comes up with a plan to do it.
- During the 20's, at the request of one of his employers, the poet Fernando Pessoa conceives an advertising slogan for the drink Coca-Louca, which panics the authoritarian government of that time.
- A look at the life and career of Spanish football star Fernando Torres.
- The Worlds Most "Smartest" Criminal
- Vital reflections of veteran actor and filmmaker Fernando Fernán Gómez.
- Mendoza ruthlessly controls the valley of San Fernando and his men guard the only entrance. When Mendoza announces he will marry Michael's girl friend Maria, Michael plans an escape. He hopes to reach the Governor and bring back the troops.
- Documentary about Fernando Méndez-Leite, one of the fundamental people in the History of Spanish Cinema that marks more than half a century of Culture.
- A young man moves to the country side, with the intention of immersing himself in nature and distancing himself from the distractions of social life.
- The story of the legendary Italian director Fernando Di Leo (Milano Calibro 9, Il boss) narrated by himself and others members of his crew...
- TV Series
- Video promo for ABBA's hit single "Fernando".
- Vallejo is an author from Colombia, living in exile, his most famous work is the novel Our Lady of the Assassins .
- A little Portuguese-Brazilian song.
- 21 October 1929. During a voyage from Trieste to the United States of America aboard the ocean liner Saturnia, two great poets crossed paths: Fernando Pessoa and C.P. Cavafy.
- Music video promoting the Jenny Lewis album 'Acid Tongue' (2008).
- Fernando Bang Bangs is a celebration of life, food, what makes life beautiful, through the eyes and hands of a curious outsider in Los Angeles; the Most Interested Man in the World, Fernando.
- TV Mini Series
- Frank Parton, a young rancher, and Jim Steele are great friends. Jim is engaged to be married to Frank's sister, Helen. One day Jim watches Frank counting out the money for the wages. Frank puts the money in the desk drawer, and locks it as Jake, the foreman, comes in with some papers to sign. That evening Jim and Helen return somewhat late from a ride and enter the house at a time when Frank is not in. Helen leaves Jim in order to change her dress, and Jim seats himself in the parlor. He hears a noise in the office and goes in, expecting to find Frank. Instead he sees Jake rifling the drawer. He gets the drop on Jake and makes him return the money; the foreman drops to his knees and begs for another chance, promising he will not do wrong again. Jim is very human and resolves to give him the opportunity to reform. At this juncture Frank opens the door and closes it quietly. Jim bears the door and tip-toes to it to see who is there. As he does so, Jake again takes the money. Frank enters and Jim makes excuses for him and the foreman leaves. Frank thanks Jim for saving the money and opens the drawer. It is gone. He accuses his friend of being in league with Jake and summons his mother and sister. Jim is outraged and humiliated and offers little in the way of explanation. He leaves. Jim writes to an old friend of his father's, who wires him to come along and to bring his mother and sister with him. Jim goes and leaves no trace behind him. The foreman is injured and confesses the crime before he dies. Helen begs Frank to find Jim and he promises to do so. Two years later his search is rewarded and he finds that Jim is a partner in a thriving ranch. He asks forgiveness and tries to explain away the mistakes made. Jim is adamant, but as Frank turns to go he thinks of a letter given him by Helen. Frank reads it and it is so charged with pitiful repentance and sorrow that Jim forgives and they go back to get her. Jim and Helen are reunited and it is clear that their marriage will be closely followed by one between Frank and Jim's sister.
- Fernando is a shy boy who covers his face with a mask and communicates only with cards. His fairy godmother transform him an attractive and confident man.
- Terrorised and taking refuge under Grandma's sofa, little Fernando is being menaced by an even smaller Alisha. But in this miniature caper all is not as it appears.
- After getting revenge on his parents' killers, vigilante Fernando has to figure out how to live a normal life now that his grenade wielding days are behind him.
- Richard Lynch travels to Merrick, Long Island, New York to speak to controversial artist Fernando Carpaneda about a life of paint, sex and rock 'n' roll. Fernando was one of the first Brazilian visual artists to divulge and exhibit systematically homoerotic works in Brazil. But since the 80s, his work hasn't been limited to this one approach only. Beggars, popstars, prostitutes, drug users, punks and outcasts of all kinds are the object of his attention and look. He portrayed them in clay sculptures and denuded them in what they possessed as sacred and profane. This plunge into street culture now gives voice to a new stage, in which his concern with the mutability of the body and the dualisms that define life - physical and spiritual, rational and instinctive, chaste or sexual - emerge. Formally, he has used an intransigent matrix of materials, exploring the potentially artistic use of the DNA, be it his own hair or that of his models, and blending it with wood, fabric, cement, stencil and canvases while preparing his sculptures and paintings. Carpaneda explores these paradoxes in conceptual and experimental works translated, most of them, into figurative form. Memories, sentences, and spiritual and popular beliefs of his characters from the past now take part in the work of the artist. Carpaneda's new sculptures, paintings and drawings deal many times with the distant relation we have with our inner nature, accentuating the conflict between 'natural' and 'cultural', which have control over the contemporary psyche.