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 410
- An examination of the causes of the economic crisis of 2008.
- Features miniature dollhouses of crime scenes to take viewers through horrifying homicides and the small clues at the crime scenes that lead investigators and police to the killer's doorstep.
- A professional race car driver marries a wealthy woman for her money, and then plans to murder her.
- During the weeks leading to Final Exams, a studious college student struggles with his lack of a social life.
- First person account of egregious injustices suffered under the American capital punishment system are examined and exposed in this influential documentary. To Flawed To Fix is comprised of interviews with wrongfully incarcerated men, former Illinois Governor George Ryan, experts from Northwestern University's Center on Wrongful Convictions, and murder victims' family members. A cogent case is made against the state's use of capital punishment, while raising the very same issues nationally. Aired in two segments in Chicago on ABC's Sanctuary program.
- Andres and Sara have known each other for a short time. Felix and Silvia have been together for five years. The two couples spend a summer day around a swimming pool.
- The supposed victim of a poisoning turns the tables on the man who tried to kill him.
- The lighthearted humour of the pun takes a dark twist in this magnificent corruption of J.K Rowling's classic novels.
- A raw autobiographical short film depicting a successful Black female attorney's painful journey from trauma-induced shame to radical self-acceptance by finding the beauty in her scars.
- The politician reveals a flaw.
- A documentary film about copyright infringement.
- A detective who thinks himself clever finds that he is outwitted by an old man. These are the facts of the thievery as he reports them to his superiors. "The victim of the robbery is a wealthy society matron. The job must have been done by the butler and the nurse-maid. The girl was on the grounds with the baby. She pretended an attempt was made to kidnap the child. Her cries brought everyone from the house. As the butler had planned, he was sent back to telephone for the police. He was alone in the house, sneaked into the mother's boudoir and stole the jewels which she had left scattered about when she ran out in response to the maid's cries. I found some of the loot under the mattress in the butler's room and have placed him and the maid under arrest." However satisfactory this report may be to headquarters, it does not satisfy the old father of the robbed woman. He may not be a detective, but he knows something about human nature and he reasons this way, "I noticed that the baby didn't have any use for that detective," he says to himself. "But he does love his nurse and the butler. Babies and dogs can tell more about people than grown-ups. I saw the detective try to kiss the nurse the other day, but the butler put him off the grounds. Therefore, he doesn't like the butler. The only evidence against the butler is that he was alone in the house and this detective says he found some of the jewelry in his room. The detective was alone in the house a long time, too. He made us stay out on the lawn while he hunted around for clues." Thinking this, he goes to work to "get the goods" on the detective. He goes to the secret service man's rooms one night, and gets him to boasting about his great sleuthing. At a given time, the police light a fire, per the instructions of the old man, outside the window. Thinking the house is on fire, the detective runs to a picture on the wall. The old man gives a signal. The police come in and find behind the picture which the detective seems to be guarding, the jewels and a lot of other loot. The double-crossing detective goes to jail, while the nursemaid and butler are released and sent back home.
- A talented but self-sabotaging young man realizes he's not the only one dealing with issues backstage in the competitive world of musical theater.
- Blair, bank cashier, conceives a hatred towards Walter, his assistant. The cashier is heavily in debt. Later, he discovers that Walter and Ruth, his employer's daughter, are in love. Blair, who also loves Ruth, plans to get his rival out of the way. Knowing there will be a large sum of money in Mr. Fielding's private safe the next night, Blair decides to burglarize it and throw suspicion upon Walter. He writes an anonymous letter to the boy, requesting him to be at a certain spot at ten o'clock the following night. Walter gets the letter the next day and carelessly places it in his desk. Blair abstracts it. That night his victim leaves Ruth shortly before ten o'clock, pleading an important engagement. Blair meanwhile burglarizes the safe. After setting the hands of a large clock in the room at 10, he throws it to the floor. The man makes his escape and arrives at the home of a friend as ten o'clock strikes, thus establishing an alibi. Walter waits at the spot designated in the letter and finally goes home believing himself the victim of a joke. Because they are the only men who know the combination of the safe, suspicion is directed toward the cashier and his assistant when the burglary is discovered the following morning. The clock indicates the hour of the robbery to Pierce, a detective. Blair readily establishes his whereabouts at ten o'clock, while Walter, unable to prove an alibi, is arrested. Later, Pierce discovers the clock had been tampered with and his suspicion falls upon Blair. The cashier becomes intoxicated and loses the decoy letter. Pierce finds it and becomes convinced of Blair's guilt. Confronting the man in the office, the detective places before him the evidence he has discovered. Terror-stricken, Blair breaks down and confesses.
- The story of brother and sister who love each other and try to escape from terrible memories of their past and sexual harassment by their parents.
- The Ward 17 crew deal with a former school teacher, while Terri looks after a young Muslim with high blood pressure. And the team also deal with an epileptic patient who has gone off her medication.
- Glen Parmenter is a brilliant KGB spy operating in the U.S. He has one flaw: he's deaf and relies on lip reading to understand what people are saying. Erskine goes undercover to smash the spy ring Parmenter is operating. Erskine's undercover identity also has a flaw: the make-believe identity has a deep secret that would attract spies to blackmail him. The question is whether Erskine's cover identity will hold up long enough to complete his assignment alive.
- A snow blizzard strands Paladin, a marshal and his prisoner at a cabin. Horseless and wounded they must try to get the prisoner to jail before he can talk his way out of his shackles. But what puzzles Paladin is why the prisoner was caught in the first place when he could have easily avoided capture.
- Abis Mal wants to eliminate Aladdin's gang by using contagious mood stones, Mechanicles by another series of mechanical insects, rivaling each-other the 'privilege', but after robber leader Akbar knocks some sense in them they join forces and set a trap in a cave to imprison Aladdin's party, then release tiny flying bugs to infect each of them -turning Jago into a womanizer, Jasmine envious, Abu into a ridiculer, Aladin fearful, Genie stuck-up- and a giant mechanical preying mantis to devour them all...
- Seth learns the hard way that looks can be deceiving when the attentions of a pretty girl lead the Defenders to face destruction in a village where, literally, nothing is as it seems.
- Episode: (2019)2019–Podcast EpisodeA discussion on the medical accuracy of American Horror Story: 1984's "Episode 100." How medically accurate is the execution?
- Episode: (2015)2014–Podcast Episode
- 2020–202325m7.7 (92)TV EpisodeThe Warners are harassed by spam./Nora must fill the segment time by airing failed, never-before-seen 'Pinky & the Brain' pilots./The Warners give safety advice.
- 2018–Podcast Episode
- Episode: (2020)2018–Podcast Episode
- 2015–TV Episode
- Critical Drinker reviews superhero action-adventure movie The Suicide Squad (2021).
- 2012–6.4 (16)TV EpisodeGhostbusters: Afterlife - A Flawed But Sincere Movie For The Fans
- 2019– 17mPodcast EpisodeIn 2019, MoviePass declared bankruptcy. The company had offered unlimited movie tickets to customers for a low monthly fee but never found a successful business model. Last week, the Federal Trade Commission alleged that MoviePass executives deceived customers to try to save the business. WSJ's Ben Fritz unspools one of the most audacious stories in Hollywood.
- Episode: (2021)2015– 1h 40mPodcast EpisodeBill is joined by Charles Barkley to discuss Draymond Green's comments on the Cavaliers and Andre Drummond, Barkley getting traded to the Suns in 1992, learning from Moses Malone, NBA title contenders in the East.
- 2016–Podcast Episode
- 2013–Podcast Episode
- Episode: (2019)2016– 39mPodcast EpisodeThe Los Angeles Clippers impress on opening night with a statement victory over crosstown rivals Los Angeles Lakers: how the Lakers can address their shortcomings and what more they can expect from the Kawhi Leonard-era Clippers. Then they preview some of the most anticipated matchups of this week.
- Episode: (2019)2016– 44mPodcast EpisodeThey discuss the James Harden dunk that wasn't counted in the Houston Rockets' double-overtime loss to the San Antonio Spurs. Are the Rockets right to file a complaint in the hope that it will point out a flaw in the replay review system? Plus: what Zion will look like when he returns, David Fizdale's clock is ticking, and LaMelo Ball's chances at going first overall in the NBA draft.
- 2014–Podcast Episode
- Episode: (2017)2015–Podcast Episode
- Episode: (2021)2015–Podcast Episode