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- An enigmatic figure uses her extensive skills to help those with nowhere else to turn.
- Robert McCall finds himself at home in Southern Italy but he discovers his friends are under the control of local crime bosses. As events turn deadly, McCall knows what he has to do: become his friends' protector by taking on the mafia.
- A man who believes he has put his mysterious past behind him cannot stand idly by when he meets a young girl under the control of ultra-violent Russian gangsters.
- Robert McCall serves an unflinching justice for the exploited and oppressed, but how far will he go when that is someone he loves?
- A retired Intelligence Agent turned private detective helps various threatened clients to equalize the odds.
- Philipe Marcel is told he can see Manon again if he kills McCall and Control.
- This short offers material from Blumenthal, Fuqua, Washington, Wenk, and stunt coordinator Keith Woulard. "Army" tells us about the movie's action and fight material.
- This is an in-film 12 segment making-of/behind-the-scenes/commentary that occasionally cuts into the movie to present viewers with full-screen features, including interviews with Denzel Washington and Antonie Fuqua and clips from the shoot.
- In 1987 the Washington Street Elevated train was torn down and community members furiously awaited rapid replacement service between the minority neighborhood of Roxbury and the job-center of Downtown Boston. Commuters boarded interim buses each day, waiting for the promise of of rapid service to be fulfilled. 15 years later the official replacement, The Silver Line, debuted. It was called Bus Rapid Transit but lacked much of the infrastructure to uphold the 'rapid' moniker. Equal or Better: The Story of the Silver Line explores the history of transportation equity in America through the lens of three communities in Boston. It unearths a story of environmental justice, race relations, and probes how we allocate tax-dollars in transportation in this nation.
- In this collection of 9 segments, we hear from director Antoine Fuqua and actors Denzel Washington as they discuss story and characters, cast and performances, themes and visual motifs, fight choreography and stunts, and related areas.
- An exploration of the film's villain, Teddy: the character's background, the character's complexity and unpredictability, Marton Csokas' performance, and more.
- Behind-the-scenes look at Alex Morgan and her fellow teammates who are paving the way for the generations of female athletes who will follow their lead.
- What if the greatest high-performance athletes - present and past - could compete against each other on a level playing field?
- The remarkable career of the footballer who became the first Englishman to transfer to Real Madrid and the first black player to represent England in a competitive match. Cunningham inspired a generation of black youngsters before his untimely death at the age of 33 in 1989.
- When a 42 year old, non-binary filmmaker joins a new local women's footy club in Regional Victoria a simple desire to play becomes a complex journey of inclusion and belonging. An unexpected turn means the team has to fight to play. Their campaign challenges age old sporting traditions and joins the wider movement for gender equity.
- Tune in as British pop phenom Ed Sheeran performs an array of brand new tracks from his latest album "=." This concert experience will take you on a transformative audio-visual journey with the singer-songwriter, exploring the themes of metamorphosis and renewal that define his fifth studio album.
- This short provides info from Denzel Washington, Antoine Fuqua, screenwriter Richard Wenk, producers Jason Blumenthal and Todd Black, and actors Melissa Leo, Chloe Grace Moretz, David Harbour and Bill Pullman at story and characters.
- Four intimate friends make a debt with each other that the one who will not get marry at all will inherit a garden outside Tehran. But 8 years later when they meet once again everything is different.
- Four films explore the history of lesbian and gay liberation in the United States from the 1960s to the 1990s
- Glimpses explores the experience communities around the world are gaining in applying the principle of gender equality to their lives, advancing the goals articulated in the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action.
- This documentary tells the forgotten story of the African-American struggle for equality in the U.S. steel industry (based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania). In a series of interviews intermixed with archival footage and stills, we learn how these workers faced and overcame discrimination that came from white workers, the big steel companies, and even from their own unions.
- Being Black at Lehigh University -- the challenges that students have faced, and the university's struggles to diversify.
- A look at how the city plays within the movie and how it is depicted in it. It explores geography and location details as well.
- Negar and Janet are close friends. Reza, Negar's husband and Janet's former lover, is a chemically-injured war victim, with his recovery a total disappointment to his doctors. Deceiving the hospital manager, a friend of Negar's influential father, they succeed in getting Reza out of the hospital and taking him to a shrine in another city, hoping for a miracle. But, in driving the long, beautiful roadway, they find miracles all around, leading them at the end to a greater miracle for the Muslim couple and unexpected enlightenment for Janet, a Christian.
- Features figures in entertainment, sports and beyond speaking about the need for the Equality Act--a crucial civil rights bill that would extend comprehensive non-discrimination protections to millions of LGBTQ people nationwide.
- A closer look at the main cast's work, including Denzel Washington, Chloë Grace Moretz, and Marton Csokas.
- TV SeriesFour androids form their own YouTube channels, waiting to discover their origins and purpose.
- The short documentary film highlights the challenges and obstacles faced by women in their quest for empowerment, featuring interviews with several women as they share their experiences.
- Veteran attorneys and judges tell their stories of what life was like for minorities in the legal community in the greater Tampa area in the 1960s.
- Creating the "hyper real" and "grounded" action and Denzel's performance thereof. It also briefly explores the tools and advantages the hardware store brings to his violent repertoire.
- A Short documentary that focuses on the daily lives and struggles of the people who are Dalit-a general classification for the "untouchables," those who are oppressed within India's traditional caste system.
- What is justice? Jan Tucker, one of the world's most sought after private detectives discusses the moral ambiguity involved with his profession, and how he works with deep-pocketed criminals to finance his fight against injustice. Jan was instrumental in uncovering the wide use of false testimony by LAPD using jailhouse informants during the 90's.
- This film begins with one of those first breakfasts at home that every young couple remembers with joy, and proceeds with the breaking in upon that happiness of an imperative note from the bride's sister summoning her to Atlantic City, where, after much consultation and more heroism on the part of both of the young people, she goes. All would perhaps move smoothly if the young husband were not so lonely; but, finding that he cannot stand it any longer, he brings the boys in to keep him company. They have a little game, and a little smoke and a little drink until the old colored cook, coming into the room in the "cold gray dawn of the morning after," expresses her disapproval of such scandalous doings and quits on the spot. The young husband cooks his own breakfast for a few days and is beginning to become reconciled to the situation when he receives a not from Uncle Whatawad, from whom, of course, he has expectations. Uncle has never approved of his nephew's marriage, and writes now to say that he is coming to town only because the little wife, whom he has never seen, is away from home. Now, how can one entertain one's rich uncle with no cook in the house? Fortunately, the little wife returns at the psychological moment, and, being a young woman of decision, as well as fascination, she finds a way. Disguising her dainty figure in rough gown and apron, she waits upon Uncle Whatawad at the table, and he, enjoying the cooked viands, congratulates his nephew on his cook. He does more; he likes the cook so well that he makes her an offer to come and cook for him, and, finding that her face is pretty, he tries to coax her to accept his offer. Just here the young husband happens into the kitchen and a small-sized riot immediately ensues, but again the little wife comes to the rescue and succeeds in patching up a truce. She confesses her deception, but offers to make amends in the sweetest way possible; only before uncle gets the kiss he must forgive nephew, too. Being no more than human and seeing two pretty lips so near his own, uncle takes the wisest course, forgives nephew and takes the kiss.
- A documentary project about Same Sex marriage from an African American perspective, the film focuses on Massachusetts State Representative and Civil Rights Movement veteran Byron Rushing, who together with a group of progressive Black clergy and activists, took the campaign for same sex marriage into the Black community, confronting the hostility of the church and defining the right of same sex marriage as a civil rights issue on par with the campaigns of the 1960s. Rushing, who is straight, is perhaps an unlikely gay hero.
- A dictator, Chan Sing, wants a martial arts manual owned by a traveling physician martial artist that can make him invincible as a fighter. After murdering the doctor he is unable to find the manual and goes after his daughter.
- Do artists with special needs see the world differently than the world sees them?
- A campaign against chick culling has been launched in the United States by Animal Equality. Each year, only in the US alone, around 300 million male chicks are cruelly killed in the egg industry because they can't lay eggs. If they are not the same breed of chickens raised for food, they are also killed by cruel techniques, like gassing, suffocation, electrocution, or not at least maceration where animals are sent to a meat grinder.