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- Explore various underwater locals around the globe in search for valuable hidden treasure in sunken ships and other challenging levels.
- Fox Jones: The Treasures of El Dorado is a 3D arcade game for kids, and it's a sequel to Bomberic. The player must help Fox Jones harvest the legendary treasures of El Dorado and defeat the evil Necroarch. Fox explores the levels, collects diamonds and other precious objects, and defeats the enemies by placing bombs, with gameplay similar to Bomberman. The game has six episodes in total.
- Fred and Barney participate in a treasure hunt to see who will become the great new Poobah.
- Help Lupin and his friends get to the Sorceror King's palace and steal the treasure.
- Text adventure game of the first novel in Enid Blyton's popular kids' series.
- Treasures of The Ancient Cavern is the tale of fantasy, adventure and ancient magic that challenges players to cross the equator and follow in the footsteps of the Incas in order to discover ancient artifacts and learn the magic of great Inca. Your objective in the game is to restore 18 Inca artifacts by solving tricky puzzles as you travel through 90 increasingly challenging levels. Each level comes with a tile-matching puzzle. To finish the level, you must make matches over stone tiles. Unlike many other games, Treasures of The Ancient Cavern lets you move the pieces in manner that doesn't try to mimic how you would do this in a typical "swap-and-match" puzzle. With Treasures of The Ancient Cavern, you click on and drag not a single tile but an entire strip of tiles to match three or more of the same kind. If the move doesn't end in a match, the strip jumps back to its position.
- Kid buccaneer Dreadly and his best friend, a silent big cute purple creature called Moop, find a treasure map that leads to the Golden Glockenspiel, but pirate captain James Trench plans to get to it first.
- Pooh finds a treasure map at the bottom of a honey pot but Gopher runs away with it so the gang must reach their friend and then the location on the map by playing party mini-games.
- The Chesapeake Bay Watershed is one of the most biologically productive estuaries on the planet. While timing with life, the bay combats environmental degradation on all fronts, but is it too late to save the bay?
- Choose from 20 different math skills to practice in this customizable Neverland adventure.
- In China, during the Qianlong reign (1736-1795) of the Qing dynasty,the emperor often ordered craftsmen to produce miniatures of his favorite art pieces so that they could be placed in small boxes to be at his side. These chests, commonly called 'curio boxes,' were meant to store small treasures. Not only marvelously designed spaces themselves, they also conceal profound and hidden puzzles of large within the small, a microcosm of the world according to the Qing court. This film introduces important curio boxes of National Palace Museum in Taiwan, allowing audiences to enjoy a rich feast of the senses.
- Excruciatingly thrilling, This is one of the most rewarding picture of the year.
- Raymond de Beauxville is engaged to the daughter of banker Stern. A reverse of fortune ruins Raymond. Mr. Stem, being a practical man, finds it necessary to set Raymond free. Raymond leaves without regret. He did not love, but simply a social arrangement. He is discouraged and seeks to end his life. Before taking the fatal step, he recalls his past life, goes to sleep and dreams memories. In his dream, he sees the castle of his ancestors and the secret vault, also two lords who come to hide the fortune of the family which was never found. Raymond awakes suddenly and finds himself imbued with new energy. He prepares to visit the country of Baux and to reassure himself as to the reality of the treasure he procures all possible information relating to that country and immediately begins his researches. He visits the quarries on the Baux property. The castle of his ancestors is a total wreck, nothing but the site of towers and the dungeon remain. Little familiar with the locality, Raymond slips and injures himself. A young beggar girl, Clara, who lives with her father in the quarries, helps him. She brings her father and they take Raymond to their home. During his convalescing, Raymond explains why he came and his strange dream. Clara while walking with Raymond reveals to him an unknown cave reached by an underground passage. She helps him and the quarry men watch their movements and are jealous of Raymond's attentions to Clara. As soon as the cave is revealed to Raymond, he alone tries to find the treasure. Clara is questioned by the quarry men, who try to torture her to reveal what she knows. She refuses and they decide to entomb Raymond alive in the dungeon. Clara hears everything and she reaches the cave, when she finds they have built a stone wall at the opening. She is giving way to despair when she discovers a dynamite cartridge of frequent use in the quarry. She uses it to blow up the part of cave where Raymond is shut in. A miraculous way is opened and she finds Raymond dying. The quarry men run to keep clear of the explosion, Raymond is saved, gains possession of the "Treasure of Baux" and returns to Paris with Clara as a bride. Mr. Stern learns that Raymond has come in possession of a large fortune, rushes to congratulate him and Raymond presents his bride as the real "Treasure of Baux," much to the disappointment of banker Stern.
- Buried Treasures starts with a little stone house on a quiet street in Fayetteville Arkansas. The house is the studio of a retired art professor Robert Ross, overflowing with art created over the last 50 years. He is a unique little man with a drive to create who has had a profound effect on the art community of Northwest Arkansas. He is a gentle soul who avoids controversy whenever possible, but his work has raised controversy, and so much of it has remained hidden to all except a few friends until now...
- Ellen Gary, poor, but passionately desiring luxury and thinking that wealth can, alone, and irrespective of all other considerations, afford happiness, loves and is to marry Robert Bray, a young lawyer, who has yet to attain financial success in his profession. The first promise of great success comes to Robert when John Street, millionaire president of the Empire Trust Company, informs him that he has decided to give him some of the business of that concern. In delight. Robert invites Ellen to a simple celebration, but this as everything else she does or has is spoiled for the girl by her contrasting of actualities with dreams of wealth. Street is a widower with one child, Rose, a girl of simple tastes and attractive personality. By chance Street meets Ellen at Robert's office, and the millionaire falls in love with her, in a short time asking her to be his wife. In Ellen's heart there is a terrible struggle between her love for Robert and her yearning for wealth, but at length the craving for luxury and social station is triumphant, and she marries Street. Shortly after, Robert who has been almost brokenhearted at the sordid faithlessness of Ellen, chances to meet Rose, who. in her strength of character and sweetness, proves to be all he had thought Ellen to be. Robert and Rose are soon deeply in love. Robert asks her father's consent to their marriage, and is scornfully refused. Though saddened to act against her father's will. Rose nevertheless declares her determination to marry Robert, and is ordered from Street's house. In his rage Street changes his will, disinheriting Rose and leaving his entire fortune to Ellen. Before he reflects, he is killed by a locomotive which strikes his automobile. By this time Ellen has realized that wealth, without love, is a gilded mockery of happiness, and free determines to win back Robert. Ellen cannot comprehend that Robert does not prefer her and the enormous fortune which is now hers to the penniless Rose. Ellen, at length, desperate, approaches Rose, offering to turn over to her the entire Street fortune if she will give Robert up, but Rose, to Ellen's astonishment, rejects the offer. Robert and Rose are married and begin their lives of simple happiness. Ellen, a vast fortune at her command, and surrounded by the gorgeous luxury for which she once longed, realizes in bitter agony the value of the treasure of love which she bartered for wealth.
- A young man and his sister are face to face with starvation, when they receive a letter signed "Thomas Wood, the Red Privateer," who confesses that he killed their father, Daniel Hardy, and sold his ship. Stricken with remorse, he bequeaths his treasure, buried in the Island of Loos, to them. The brother and sister consult a solicitor, who advances them money for the journey. But the captain of the ship in which they travel discovers their secret, and informs the crew with the exception of one man, who, however, hears the captain talking to the others, and warns the brother and sister. When the time comes to land, young Hardy manages to leave the captain behind with some of the sailors. The captain follows, and a struggle ensues, during which he is killed and his accomplices are made prisoners. The Hardys are successful in finding the treasure, and they sail away from the island with the sailors bound fast to the mast.
- Old Farmer Giles, a financial power of the county in which he lives objects to Frank Wheeler as a suitor for his daughter's hand because the young man is poor. Undismayed by the farmer's objections the young people continue their love making at such times as they can do so without discovery by the old man. This condition has prevailed for some time, when the old man becomes suspicious of his own family as regards their attitude toward his treasure, so decides to hide it in a place beyond their reach. He takes his wealth from its hiding place in the room and makes his way along the highway and across the fields toward the orchard in which he has decided to bury the money. He is observed by two thugs who follow him to gain knowledge of the hiding place. It so happens that the old man, in his way across the fields, passes a scarecrow, which is being used as the trysting place of his daughter and young Wheeler. To avoid the unfriendly father the youth hides behind the scarecrow, while Farmer Giles stops for a moment to converse with his daughter Frank observes the two thugs who are following the old man. As the farmer goes on his way the youth watches the rascals and understands their plan. Through his knowledge, both of the hiding place and of the fact that the tramps knows of its whereabouts, he is enabled to save the old man's wealth and through this aid is accepted into the family.
- 'The art of writing' is a memory which is a part of man's attempt to document the world. Writing on Ola (palm) leaves is a refined, skilled and humane memory that should be treasured.
- Documentary Channel's partnership with the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences continues to broaden with this in-depth look at the importance of film preservation. John Huston's World War 2 documentaries, "Battle of San Pietro" and "Let There Be Light," which have been preserved by DOC and AMPAS, are highlighted as examples of film as living history. Featuring interviews with John Huston's son, Tony, and top directors and historians who shed considerable light on this important, exciting subject.
- This is the sequel to the thrilling adventure, Chivalry: Call of the Noose. In this story, a crazy and insane Prime Minister tries to hunt down a pirate (or misunderstood sailor). The sailor travels far and wide to locate the hidden treasure that everyone wants.
- This documentary follows the attempts of Franck Goddio, a French underwater archaeologist, to the wreck of the Royal Captain (British East India Company trading ship that ran aground and sank in the South China Sea).
- Reuniting at a funeral, four old pals find out their best friends death was no accident. Left for them was a mysterious map. With no brains or skills they set on a journey to find the treasure their friend died for. It rests in the hands of a Washup, a Vlogger, a Jailbird, and a Balloon Artist.
- Abdar Rahman, returning from a raid upon a neighboring tribe, brings with him, Romeika, the daughter of its sheik. She is introduced into his harem but repulses all his advances till messengers from her father brings a ransom by which the freedom of the girl is affected. In leaving the palace Romeika's rescuers give warning of the intention of her father to return and capture the jewels left in ransom. Fearing the vengeance of his enemy, Abdar buries his treasure and writes in code its secret resting place. This code is locked in a Koran box which he places, as he thinks, in a safe place. His action is seen, however, by a faithless servant. Not long afterwards Romeika's people assail the palace, capture its inmates and kill Abdar, but are thwarted in their search for the treasure by the faithless servant who obtained the code and departs with it. In his flight, over the barren wastes, in his efforts to reach a haven from which to return and secure the treasure as his own the exhausted fugitive sees the returning horde. In his vain efforts to secure a position of vantage he falls from a cliff and the box is lodged in the rocks below. Three hundred years later at the time Morocco is occupied by the French, a native woman, in recovering a stray goat, discovers a strange-looking box on the hillside. It is taken to her tent and later sold to an army officer, who, upon opening it, finds a faded manuscript, the writing of which he is unable to understand. A translation is made by a native merchant in the market place, who dexterously deciphers its real meaning and cunningly goes to unearth the treasure for himself. The translation given to his patron appears at first to be a meaningless combination of words, but he later discovers its real meaning and immediately goes in search of the jewels which have been so long buried. By the time he has overcome the contending obstacles and reaches the place of the buried treasure the thief has succeeded in unearthing it and is well on his way. A chase is instituted after the fleeing man which at times grows close, but his trial is afterwards lost. In the meantime, the fugitive tries to hide the treasure in a desolate place. He is prevented from carrying out his purpose by the presence of lions who frighten him away. In the haste for safety the box is left on the desert, where the lions stand guard over the strange object.