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
1-27 of 27
- Twelve people and a dog travel through time, when three groups in their own cars go on vacation to the 1980s.
- Cutting yourself is about intense inner evil. Physical pain feels relief, but only for a moment. However, cutting will never solve problems and internal anxiety. You can also get hooked on it. A short experimental documentary about survival produced for young people and their parents. The visually driven narration is based on bold use of graphics, hand processed black and white film and mezmerizing sound design.
- "Without Bergman, I would be someone else," Jörn Donner has said on several occasions. Now Donner has made a trip to Fårö and dug into his archives and the result has been " The Memory of Ingmar Bergman". A film in which Donner recalls his relationship with Ingmar Bergman, a relationship that began when Donner was 16 and saw the film "Prison" and ended with Bergman's death in 2007. It is also a film about loss. And a film with some completely unpublished material.
- New modern women's prison in Hämeenlinna received new residents in late 2020. Prisoners Lilja, Jane and Mirella are moving in from the temporary facilities with anticipation, while the staff are trying to adapt to the changing conditions and different working spaces.
- An evening of hypnosis on TV - featuring the Finnish hypnotist Olliver Hawk. "Do as I tell you to do. Think as I tell you, so that you can find new experiences," the magic words from Hawk when he tries hypnotize an entire TV audience. Born as Erkki Olavi Vilhelm Hakasalo in 1930, emigrated to Australia in the early 50's where his career began, inspired by Aboriginal rituals and spiritualism, he became Olliver Hawk. He raised to fame in the 60's diligently appearing in the media and presenting spectacular hypnotic shows. In 1988 his heart stopped performing in Kemi, Finland. As Hawk fell to his knees, the audience and Hawk's assistants thought this behavior was part of his show.
- Depicts how a forensic psychiatric examination is done. The crime is illustrated with scenes from a family life that will eventually end tragically. The starting point is a couple with children who have moved from the Turku archipelago to Helsinki. Gunvor takes as the only one in the family driving license and goes around to their various jobs and meets friends while Gustav mentally collapses, drinking more and more and feeling a growing anger. It all escalates in family violence that ends in what is reproduced to be a murder even though the man is said to have memory gaps and has reported himself.
- Japan has one of the oldest populations in the world. Not enough children are being born. There are not enough workers to make the wheels turn. Now the elderly are forced to continue their working careers until they are 100 years old. But will this be enough to save Japan's future?
- What happens when three adult sons are left arguing about the inheritance?
- Aino Ackté (1876-1944) the soprano, librettist and in private. Colleagues remember the pioneer of Finnish opera. Jean Sibelius dedicated his tone poem Luonnotar to Ackté and she premiered the work on 10 September 1913 at the Three Choirs Festival in Gloucester, England. Her final public performances took place at the Savonlinna Opera Festival in 1930. Ackté is theorized to have most likely been the original model for the opera diva character Bianca Castafiore in comics books of "Adventures of Tintin".
- "Olliver Hawk and the skill of miracle healing" - the famous Finnish hypnotist perform miracle surgery on a patient. After returning from his Far East performance tour in the fall of 1974, Hawk was the first to publicly reveal the so-called miracle cures in the Philippines, which received a lot of international attention as hoaxes. On January 17, 1975, Yleisradion's A-Studio aired a television program in which Hawk revealed and demonstrated with slow motions, illustrating how numerous Finns and others had been deceived in the miracle surgeries performed in the Philippines, in which malignant tumors were allegedly removed from patients without any wounds being made to the patients.
- Aino Ackté (1876-1944) the soprano, librettist and in private. Colleagues remember the pioneer of Finnish opera. Jean Sibelius dedicated his tone poem Luonnotar to Ackté and she premiered the work on 10 September 1913 at the Three Choirs Festival in Gloucester, England. Her final public performances took place at the Savonlinna Opera Festival in 1930. Ackté is theorized to have most likely been the original model for the opera diva character Bianca Castafiore in comics books of "Adventures of Tintin".
- "What happened to Raisa Räisänen?" - about a Finnish teenager who went missing, aged 16, in Tampere, Finland, on Oct. 16, 1999. The last confirmed sighting of Räisänen was from this time, at 22:50, near the Sokos department store. The police continue to investigate the disappearance as a homicide. The case was initially considered manslaughter, but is today being investigated as murder. According to Finnish law, murder never expires under the statute of limitations, whereas manslaughter expires after 20 years. The bodybuilder and convicted murderer Virpi Butt remains the only suspect in the disappearance of Raisa Räisänen.
- The day before Christmas Eve in 1964, Aarne Laakso enters the Tampere machine shop. He tells the male seller that he wants to buy a drill.
- A trans lesbian woman named Michael Maria Penttilä, who is to date the only person in Finnish history to meet the FBI's definition of a serial killer.
- Ensio Koivunen poisoned three female hitchhikers using carbon monoxide in the summer of 1971.
- In October 1964, the body of a young woman was found raped and strangled by a pair nylon socks. Three months later another girl, also in the city of Kuopio, was found in the same way.
- Since 2002, before the trial of the serial drowning case, Pekka Seppänen had received dozens of convictions for abuse against people and animals. Later it turned out that seven people had died on his grounds.
- The unique characteristic of these five killings was that the murderer removed his victim's teeth. For example, while killing his wife, he pulled out her teeth and later stole his friend's dental prosthesis.
- A nurse is found guilty of killing five patients and the attempted murder of five more. No motive was established for the murders.
- In the summer of 2014, the bodies of five newborns were found in the warehouse of the apartment building. The woman who gave birth to children was arrested on suspicion of five murders.
- On the morning of October 5th 1991 a retired fisherman was out on his boat in Vassor Bay, Finland, when he saw a floating body in the water. That was the first of three young woman found with the name of Pia.
- Juhani Aataminpoika left home at the age of 15, living a nomadic life and doing petty crimes. In October 1849, he was charged with stealing horses and imprisoned. During his imprisonment, he was taken from the Hämeenlinna prison to Hauho, where the court was to be held on his crimes. During transport, he escaped, starting a homicidal spree.
- A criminal case in Hyvinkää on Nov. 21, 1998. In the media, the case was combined with Satanic worship. As the victim was being tortured, the satanists reportedly listened to "The Cainian Chronicle" by Ancient.
- A three-part crime-drama about the lonely streetwalker Maria Lindell who transforms herself to the German noble lady Minna Craucher, an influential Madame who held literary salons in Helsinki for a few years when the prohibition law was at its most severe. It was mainly young journalists, artists and writers, like Mika Waltari and Olavi Paavolainen who enjoyed her company. It was here in the salon that under Madame Craucher's leadership was decided which books would receive favorable reviews or would pass unnoticed. Craucher also made an impression in politics. For a while she was involved in the fascist pro-German Lappo movement. On March 8, 1932, Minna Craucher, at the age of 40, was murdered. Only then did she get the attention that she was striving for all her life.
- A four-part crime-drama about Juhani Aataminpoika/Johan Adamsson who murdered 12 people during five weeks in the autumn of 1849. It is still a Finnish record. Among the victims were his own family. He was extremely versatile. He killed acquaintances, unknown, in the dump, sober, in connection with robbery, in anger, without cause, planned, he killed people of all ages, of both sexes. In 1850 The Vyborg Court of Appeal sentenced him to death. The sentence was upheld in the Senate's Department of Justice, but the Emperor commuted it to 40 lashes and a life imprisonment sentence. He was transferred to Suomenlinna in January 1853 and kept there, chained to a wall, until his death in 1854.