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- A foul-mouthed former gymnastics bronze medalist with local celebrity status reluctantly trains a rising Olympics aspirant.
- Doc and the Amazing Five battle Captain Seas and "the green death" for control of a fabulous resource.
- A new story created by the bestseller author Gustavo Malajovich inspired the first season of the series, along with Marcos Osorio Vidal.
- Cowboy Bob Blake (Herbert Jeffries) and four friends ride to Arizona to help Betty Jackson (Artie Young), the sister of Bob's friend, Joe (Rollie Hardin), who has gone missing.
- Documentary about the presence of Latin American culture and actors in American movies.
- Legend of Ji Xiao-Lan - a famous smart official and scholar in the period of Emperor Qianlong of the Qing Dynasty.
- Critical review of the band's amazing rise to power from the very beginning to the departure of "Fast" Eddie Clarke.
- A white fur-trapper, Harvey Ogden (Frank Mayo) takes an Indian maiden, A-Che-Chee (Claire McDowell), as his bride, a union that meets with much disapproval when they return to civilization. But their child, a boy (Frankie Lee) helps bring about many adjustments to the attitudes of the civilized people.
- Together three widows and one senile mom whose antics take you for a spin embrace a new life as the Bronze Sist'as. No one loves church more than First Lady Mabel Phillips, but her whole life come to a tragic halt when she becomes a widow.
- In the 1850s, a young prince in India promises his dying father he will lead a revolt against the English colonial masters of India. However, since he is half-European himself, he can't bring himself to do it and flees to America, to live in obscurity. He finds, however, that he can't outrun his obligations, and he soon meets a messenger sent from India to remind him of the promise he made to his father. Complications ensue.
- Prehistoric pottery can become a source of inspiration for current potters. Throughout the documentary, potters and artisans experiment with the (re)creation of very burnished vessels from four European societies of the Bronze Age: El Argar, Únetice, Füzesabony and Vatin. In four chapters, we closely follow the manufacturing processes of these ceramics, from the search for the raw material to the cooking of the final product. The production, which had Spain, Germany, Hungary and Serbia as a backdrop, is part of the "Crafting Europe in the Bronze Age and Today" (2018-2019) project, under the "Creative Europe" program.
- A struggling artist is tasked with identifying the creator of an unusual sculpture. With the help of her fickle business partner and a mysterious hermit, she discovers a dark secret about the sculpture that puts their lives in danger.
- Sculptor Leonard Hunt is urged by his wife Vivian to compete for a million dollar prize competition for a Victory Memorial commemorating the First World War. Sylvia Morton models for Hunt, and they become romantically involved. In an attempt to save her marriage, Vivian persuades him to close the studio and go on a second honeymoon. But Hunt is unable to forget Sylvia, so he leaves Vivian. Vivian threatens to kill Sylvia unless she promises to give up Hunt. Months later, Hunt returns, remorseful and begging forgiveness, saying that Sylvia has married someone else.
- She was young, strong, and very courageous, but she met an untimely demise in the summer of 1370 BC. Many were saddened by her death and devastated by the loss of this Nordic Bronze-Age Girl. Age 16 to 18, she was buried with bracelets, an ox-hide, and a small child at her feet. For the first time since her discovery in 1921, scientists are able to glimpse her life in the mountains of Scandinavia.
- A rich man's secretary catches a burglar who exposes him as an ex-convict.
- Losing his fiancée, Nanette, to French Capt. Duval Van Jean, Jacques, an engineer in a large gun factory, cannot contain his jealousy. In the same factory the officer is overseeing the construction of a cannon of his own invention.
- Bronze discusses and criticizes various topics.
- When Martin, an unassuming mid twenties man accidentally steals the bronze fox from the Bentley Foresare Museum he finds himself trying to figure out a way of getting away with burglary of a priceless artifact with his friend Jamie.
- Two estranged sisters are forced to confront each other after their mother's unexpected death.
- Derrick for DesertWolfArmory has received new wheels for his Toyota Tacoma.
- Mary Lawton bids farewell to her father, Mark Lawton, and his business partner, John Adams, to whom she is engaged, leaving Arizona to study art in New York. After a time, John visits Mary unexpectedly and discovers to his sorrow that she has forgotten him in the convivial whirl of her new life. Upon his return to Arizona, he learns that Mark has died, and in his grief and disappointment, he sets fire to the house he built for Mary. Still in New York, Mary visits sculptor Trovio Valdez and is about to surrender to his advances when she sees his bronze statue of John. Realizing her love for her old sweetheart, she abandons her Bohemian friends and accepts a position as a governess with oil magnate Frank Marsh. Frank wants John's oil-rich lands but offers to give up his claim if Mary will be his wife. She agrees, but when Frank realizes that her heart belongs to John, he rides out of their lives, and they finally reunite.
- Penny and her church are having fun at the new evolution exhibit until they are interrupted by the nefarious "Neanderthal!" Can The Priestess save the day?
- The students of St. Conaire's Primary School, Shannon, County Clare, experience what life was like in bronze age Ireland as they visit Craggaunowen, Quin, County Clare.
- Eric Cline professor of Classics and Anthropology describes the characteristics of the Bronze Age in the Mediterranean region.
- Narrated by Liev Schreiber, this film was produced by the National Gallery of Art's Department of Exhibition Programs for the exhibition Power and Pathos: Bronze Sculpture of the Hellenistic World. In the fourth century B.C., a new and very different kind of sculpture emanated from the court of Alexander the Great. Hellenistic artists developed an interest in depicting the personalities and individuality of the peoples of their own world. Their chosen medium was bronze sculpture-- cast from figures modeled in wax or clay. Fine details - hair, wrinkles, scars - could be more easily crafted in pliable materials and also help to capture the individuality of the subject. Bronze's greater tensile strength also permitted more dynamic poses. After Alexander's death in 323 B.C., bronze sculptures dominated the cultural landscape of Alexander's former empire. Thousands of them stood outside stadiums, theatres, market places and homes throughout Greece and the Mediterranean, Egypt, the Middle East and India. This film includes specially shot footage of sites in Greece -- including Corinth, Delphi and Olympia. It was made possible by the HRH Foundation.
- When villagers accidentally happen upon a mirror for the first time, they mistake their own reflection for a stranger. The mirror reflects the villagers' own hopes and fears, bringing confusion and chaos to the household. A Korean folktale.
- An intimate portrait of a community of bronze artisans in Foumban, the 'City of Arts'.
- Todays theme is The Bronze Locust.
- Doubleday goes to Melbourne to collect the treasured 'Bronze Bird' award for his research into the life of the sparrow.
- This series are great and fun to watch.
- The kids search for whoever is exploiting a legend to extort pearls from a Polynesian island.
- The kids become obsessed with a huge locked box that contains Statler and Waldor's souvenirs from their travels around the world and imagine what wonders it holds.