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- A documentary on a Palestinian farmer's chronicle of his nonviolent resistance to the actions of the Israeli army.
- Filmmaker Chantal Akerman documents the life of her mother Natalia Akerman, a Polish immigrant and survivor of Auschwitz.
- We call those who suffer from the melancholy of eternity, eternals. Convinced that death cannot triumph over their lives, they believe that they are doomed to wander in anticipation of the day when they will be freed from their existence. This film is a story of wandering and fleeing, on the borders of Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian enclave in Azerbaijan. Inhabited by the ghosts of genocide and by the war that has raged there for over twenty years, the characters who pass through this film carry within themselves the melancholy of the eternals.
- Keeping the original theatrical mise-en-scene, the film features Delphine Seyrig and her niece Coralie Seyrig reciting Sylvia Plath's letters to her mother directly to the audience as though we were the recipients of these private missives
- Whatever happened to this promising young actress from Hollywood? A search for "the woman in the car" through the never-ending suburbia of Los Angeles, where the myth of cinema reigns. A sort of thriller without a corpse.
- After his classes, the teacher is questioned by his wife. The wife is skeptical about the new Academic project his husband is devising. The teacher is trying to build up a new "Academy of the Muses"that, inspired by the Classics will help to build up a brand new World through a real commitment to Poetry. The controversial project triggers a round of scenes on words and desire.
- The staircases of John Clancy's terraced house are filled with hundreds of unsold volumes like a Noah's Ark of Knowledge telling the stories of a city that has known stormier times. Accompanied by a dyslexic, opera-loving punk the Bookseller of Belfast treads a new path through the pages yellowed by time and cigarette smoke.
- The young lion tamer Tairo is unhappy with his present life situation. He uses the loss of his talisman to make a trip through Italy searching for the man, who gave it to him a long time ago.
- A poetic film in 18 waves, as so many scenes describe Paris and its urban landscapes crossed by a young minor "foreigner isolated", the terrorist attacks, white roses, state of emergency, blue white red, the Atlantic Ocean and its crossings, volcanoes, the beat cubicle, the revolt, the anger, the police violence, a revolutionary song, the silence and the joy, only the joy.
- Covers outstanding personalities of their time and in their discipline, who are only too rarely seen in the media today. Philosophers, artists, activists, researchers, all have contributed to forging and enriching contemporary thinking.
- An investigative film shot in Algeria, Greece and France, this documentary offers to look, with the writings of Camus as a reference, at what is happening around us and how the absurd and the revolt cannot prevent the search for happiness.
- Follows the rehearsals of 'Faits d'artifice', a choreography by Françoise and Dominique Dupuy, created with Régine Chopinot and the company Le Ballet Atlantique, as the director is aiming to catch the process of creation from the inside.
- At the point where the peace process has reached yet another dead-end, Eyal Sivan tries to go beyond the idea of "the two-state solution". Through the use of editing, Sivan creates an encounter between Palestinian Arabs and Israeli Jews. Twenty parallel interviews on the theme of a common state. One talks, the other listens.
- Fifty years after his assassination, Patrice Lumumba, Prime Minister of the newly independent Congo, is back to haunt Belgium. Through commemorations, encounters and a return visit, a top-ranking Belgian civil servant confronts the past.
- A filmed diary which chronicles two visits to the Olivas, a family of Spanish beekeepers from Salamanca, at the time of the honey harvest, in August and September. Their work and their itinerant life are seen from a friend's point of view.
- Naples. A Virgin with bruise on her cheek who performs miracles. Three female characters, each connected to the Virgin in their own way but who never meet. Giusy, a girl in a wheelchair who had no right to a miracle; an atheist, free-spirited, and an anthropologist specializing in the worship of the Virgin Mary. Fabiana, a transsexual at the head of a troupe faithful supporters of the Virgin in a popular district of the city center. And Sue, a Korean pianist in search of a new direction for her life, teaching music to children in difficulty in a city far removed from her original culture. Each with their intimate wounds and each searching for a "miracle".
- André Jourdel is a cattle dealer. He has three son with whom he is dealing. When he buys cattle on the market with Hubert, Thierry is the one who will fatten them before Dominique cut them for sale to the slaughter. As long as he can, André will help running the family business but his children do not see the development of the business in the same way.
- Malek puts his camera at the service of El Watan, a prestigious publication in an unstable democracy. This is a telling of the encounters that take place at the paper, and a reflection on freedom of the press.
- Speaking on the telephone with the Hungarian Consulate, the filmmaker asks: "Does someone whose grandfather is Hungarian have the right to obtain a Hungarian passport?" The question apparently sounds strange. "Yes - It's possible... But, why do you want a Hungarian passport?" The filmmaker asks for the list of necessary documents, but the officer woman still doesn't understand why she wants to become Hungarian. The idea took place on her mind: she is going to ask for the Hungarian nationality. She didn't say a word to anyone but she wouldn't give it up. The administrative process - the request for a passport - is the guiding line of the film. And the filmmaker faces essential questions: what is nationality? What's the use of a passport? What is our heritage? How do we construct our own history and identity?
- Following the steps of the Nan Shui Bei Diao - South to North Water Transfer - the world's largest water transfer project, stretching between southern and northern China.
- Near the Dead Sea, in the middle of the desert, Marianna, Bulos, Suleiman, Michael and some more share their stories and questions and give an insight on life's paradoxes and the power of doubt: the salt of our fragile humanity.
- Twenty minutes from the Champs Élysées, chambermaids of a hotel go on strike for the first time with the help of an experienced trade unionist.
- Through the political activism of some people of Khayelitsha, the film seeks to reveal the attachment of its residents to a city born of Apartheid. Why, despite all this suffering, disease, poverty, illegality, do they still believe in it?
- The film is set up for a full academic year in the Rouen Conservatory of Music, to allow the director to find, among the young students, who can play the heroine of his project, Joan of Arc, during her trial told in her own words.
- Maud-Elisa Mandeau, a.k.a. Le Prince Miiaou, is a young French rock singer-guitarist-songwriter. In the spring of 2010, she starts the production of her third album as the director closely follows her detailed musical creation process.
- With Camus' The Myth of Sisyphus as a reference, the film follows what is happening around us: the fate of migrants, Sisyphus of our time, who are still trying and trying to enter Europe, the popular revolt in Tunisia, or radical actions.
- A group of teenagers from different backgrounds, attending a Parisian psychiatric day hospital, participate with other patients from the same institution in a dance mediation project also involving students from a vocational high school.
- In the Argentine pampas, the lands around Colonia Hansen are among the most fertiles in the world. For a long time, millions of cows were pasting there in the open air. It was said that the best beef was Argentine.
- In the Brazilian Nordeste, Vanilda and her husband Antonio, along with twenty other farmers families, obtain some lands. Supported by the landless trade union,they spent four years occupying an camp in a remote mountain . Like pioneers from an old western, they settle a farming community on this land haunted by dryness, with the sole strength of their arms and hopes. The collective management of the property and its resources turns out to be an adventure even more demanding than the conquest of the lands. It is this utopian force that the film looks at, grounding through the ordeal of a desolated reality.
- Chronicles of rural life, misadventures from the past century, fights one must win to muster misery and resistance against servitude and wage labor in the South of Portugal.
- Every month, a truck crosses the Italian peninsula from the far south to the foot of the Alps: a three-thousand-kilometer round trip to bring home-made and traditional products from the South to the family in the North. A trove on wheels.
- British designer, teacher and author Richard Hollis calls Pierre Faucheux "the single most important figure in French graphic design after Cassandre," and praises his highly innovative typographic design for book covers and 60s paperbacks.
- Struggling to come to terms with his grim past and the consequences of growing up in a post-civil war era, Rami remembers little from his childhood, and so seeks the help of his mother, Nawal, who talks about dreams, fears, chaos and love.
- Local activists in Gaza, Germany, and Colombia challenge fossil-fuel dependency and power structures in a struggle for social and climate justice.
- Maths, drama, bodybuilding lessons: with extraordinarily skillful framing and off-screen sound, the film's central theme looks at high-school students who have been marginalized by the education system.
- Experiencing a war is an ordeal which, at the time, changes the perception of reality and, later, the way one looks at life. The film is the result of a period of the director's life in Lebanon, especially during the conflict of July 2006.
- Baptiste Bessette went to Hiroshima to question the city about the shadows of its past and the cogs of its future. A vital lead: the ginkgo biloba, a prehistoric tree which is eventually the only one to have survived the nuclear disaster.
- Zona Franca de Iquique S.A. manages a large free-trade zone in the city of Iquique, in northwestern Chile. This territory bears the scars of the last wilderness of original America transformed into a showcase for a weird commercial circus.
- Let us follow French singer Nino Ferrer who had several lives: popular hits that made him famous; a dark but artistically fruitful period; a hidden life - of its own volition - leaving show biz; a brilliant, complex, flayed character.
- Tells the story of a herd of heifers born in France and sold to an old Kolkhoz in Western Siberia, the Zarya Farm. This tale, in which cows travel and talk, brings the forgotten Russian farmers' world out in the open.
- Tells the joint stories of two urban slums that were built, 40 years apart, on the same territory, outside the city, in Massy, in the southern suburbs of Paris.
- For Caterina, Laurence, Frédérie and Louis, being bipolar means going from paradise to the hell of depression several times during their lives
- This is the daydream story of a woman who made her life her artwork and her artwork the lives of others, Sylvie Crossman. From her childhood in French Polynesia to her humanitarian commitment in Australia, we follow her career.
- For five weeks, 15 short programs including 5 sequence shots, 35 photos and 4 video clips are simultaneously broadcast on the Web to tell the story of the Palais des Congrès in Rouen, an architectural gem recently demolished.
- This film was born from walks and pondering in the European countryside. This is not a proselyte film, nor a propaganda film against GMOs. It's about telling concerned mothers, or shopaholics at the supermarket, the things we are not told.
- Documentary filmmaker Alexandre Barry is following an extraordinary theatre director, and man of the stage, all the way to Japan: Frenchman Claude Régy, the apostle of silence, intensity and obscurity, who evokes his long and rich theatre career. Born in 1923, he counts as one of the most important European directors of modern theatre.
- In Mauritania, black political prisoners from the old colonial fortress of Oualata are known as "Le Cercle des Noyés". The film unveils frangible memories by one of these former prisoners who remembers his story and that of his companions in misfortune.