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- Danish director Mads Brügger and Swedish private investigator Göran Björkdahl are trying to solve the mysterious death of Dag Hammarskjöld. As their investigation closes in, they discover a crime far worse than killing the Secretary-General of the United Nations.
- A documentary that follows the Serbian performance artist as she prepares for a retrospective of her work at The Museum of Modern Art in New York.
- A look at the late '60s and early '70s rock band The Doors, including rare exclusive footage.
- The film is a historical and socio-anthropological portrait of the provincial capital of Campania, Naples, and the organised crime that afflicts it, and is the fruit of months of rummaging through the treasures of Rai Teche, the archives of the Italian state broadcaster. Surprising vintage footage, most of it never shown before, finds a visceral connection with the original music and songs written by Meg. Camorra delves into the soul of an inscrutable city. The film clips tell the story of the growth of the crime syndicate between the 1960s and 1990s: from its subordination to the Mafia, which controlled the contraband of cigarettes in Campania after the war, until the advent of Raffaele Cutolo, who unified the bands of extortionists into a single, large armed and economic power.
- Rafael witnesses Marina, a woman with a glass eye, being attacked on the street by Daniel, whom she has known since childhood they both spent in the orphanage. Rafael rescues Marina from Daniel and takes her to his home, where a relationship develops between them. Marina is pregnant but Daniel doesn't want the child, so Rafael offers to be the father, being physically unable to sire his own. He and Marina stay together as a couple, then as a happy family. But once everything seems to be settled, Daniel--newly released from prison--shows up again.
- Revolves around the love between an immortal hero and Janaína, the woman he has been in love with for 600 years, through Brazil's colonization, slavery, military regime and the future, in 2096, in the midst of wars for water.
- Khaled, Mahmoud and Subhi volunteer with the White Helmets trying to save lives of hundreds of victims in the besieged city of Aleppo during the Syrian Civil War.
- Documents Marco Pantani's battle with addiction after winning Tour de France and Giro d'Italia in 1998 until his death from cocaine poisoning six years later.
- A film about the Paris Peace Conference that negotiated the end of World War I with the Versailles Treaty.
- In Tanzania there is a growing clandestine market for albino body parts. As a result people with albinism live in fear. Jerome, a karate master, has made teaching kids with albinism to defend themselves his life's mission.
- In the wake of the first papal resignation in 600 years, Gianluigi Nuzzi- the investigative reporter who published the Vatileaks - examines Benedict XVI's 8 years papacy. He uncovers a controversial pontiff , with a vision of the church at odds with the world today but courageous enough to try and sheds light on the sexual abuses and the shady business of the Pope's bank.
- The exit door of the Bataclan theatre, the site of Bansky mural, The Sad Girl, is stolen mysteriously. After it abruptly appears on of a hillside cottage in Abruzzo, French and Italian investigators unite to get to the bottom of the theft.
- John Dickie explores the violent history of the Italian mafia, the victims and the connection to the church.
- Summer 2012. Two Italian women directors on a journey want to tell through a film on the road the changes that have occurred in their region, their homeland, and the main issues of the films shot by one of them, Cecilia, about fifty years ago. The film goes through places and ages and the archival footage interacts with the images of the present. The journey becomes the chance to face with the questions that were the core of Cecilia's search: how to approach the industrialization that drags up Italy and its people from an obsolete dimension, meantime throwing it in a cruel and contradictory dimension. Answers will be found meeting the people, through personal perspectives on a public interest theme.
- The history of the Trojan horse is probably one of the most famous stories ever told. A gigantic wooden horse is loaded with Greek soldiers and presented to the Trojans as a gift. Unsuspecting, they swallow the bait and pull the horse into the city. Under cover of darkness the Greeks slip out of the horse and open the gates to their comrades. Only hours later the mighty Troy goes up in flames. But what if the myth of the horse is not true at all? New, groundbreaking findings show that one of the most famous stories of all time will probably have to be rewritten. The Trojan horse was probably not a horse at all. But then how did the Greeks outwit their enemies? And what history will we find in the history books in the future?
- TV show aired in Italy based on 2007 John Dickie's book "The Delizia!: The Epic History of the Italians and Their Food ".
- A chronicle of Nobel Prize winning physicist Marie Curie's little known yet invaluable contribution to wounded soldiers' treatment during World War I, and her professional partnership with radiotherapy pioneer Claudius Regaud.
- Twenty years after Chavez' Revolution, the oil richest country in the world is facing an economic and humanitarian crisis: crushed by corruption and poverty, Venezuela is on the brink of collapse.
- With an area three times larger than Pompeii, Baia, about 15 km from Naples and within the volcanic area of the Phlegraean fields, is the largest underwater archaeological site in the world. In 100 BC Pompeii is an ordinary city of small traders crouched on the slopes of Mt. Vesuvius, while Baia gains a peculiar reputation: it gradually becomes the ancient Las Vegas or Monte Carlo of the Roman Empire, a real posh center for noble gens and the powerful . Nestled in the center of the Gulf of Pozzuoli, Baia is flanked on one side by the port of Puteoli (ancient Pozzuoli) and on the other by the port of Capo Miseno. Both of these landings boast enormous prestige, one is the nerve center of Roman trade capable of handling a traffic of over 1,000 ships per year, with the task of supplying the capital with food but also with very precious rarities coming from the exotic east ; at the head of Miseno, on the other hand, allocates the imperial fleet to defend the interests of the entire gulf. Sumptuous buildings, monumental spas and brothels frequented by the rich "holiday makers" appear. Owning a villa here means prestige, a worldly duty. Baia is the most exclusive and renowned holiday resort in the ancient world, the fulcrum of the "dolce vita" of that time. It is no coincidence that emperors such as Caesar, Nero, Marcus Aurelius and Hadrian also decide to fix their imperial mansions there to take refuge from the austere and frenetic life of the capital. No wonder then that just in Pozzuoli an amphitheater was born long before the best known Colosseum in Rome.
- The European dictators of the 20th century were strong, powerful, confident, holders of absolute truth. They seemed invincible, until the very moment they fell. In the darkest time of modern history, they held millions of people in their grip, ruling their fate for better and for worse. But as frightening as they were, they also were terrified, haunted by an obsession that followed them to the grave: the Masonic conspiracy. Every dictator thinks Freemasons are the masterminds of a conspiracy against the nation and its leader. For each dictator, there is a different justification for banning the lodges. Mussolini, who took advantage of the political opportunity presented by the Lateran Pacts, has a control mania; Hitler fears a Jewish-Masonic conspiracy, in which the lodges are instruments at the service of the Jews to dominate the world; Franco fears an international communist-Masonic conspiracy against Catholic Spain. Towards the end of World War II, US President and Freemason Harry Truman sends his friend Ray Denslow to help the Masonic lodges recover after the long years of Nazi-fascist dictatorships. Thanks to his diary, unseen until 2018, we will journey through Europe of 1945 to discover a story not recounted in the history books. The story will be told with the help of some of the world's leading historians, through usage of colourized archive footage and reconstructions of key events that were not recorded at the time. Our journey will take us through Italy, Spain, Germany, France and Belgium to search traces of Freemasonry and the devastation wrought by the dictators. We will visit some of the most prestigious temples in Europe, such as the Grand Orient de France, the Grande Oriente d'Italia and the Grande Oriente de Madrid. Our goal is to understand, through artifacts still in use today for Masonic rituals, what caused so much fear among the most vicious men of modern history, and why even today Freemasonry is considered the perfect enemy.
- Do you really believe that nothing happens while we sleep?
- 9/11 could have happened 25 years ago, few days after Christmas 1985. At 9am of 27th December '85, a four men commando breaks in "Leonardo da Vinci" Airport in Rome and opens fire on passengers at check-in. Same morning, same hour: at Schwechat Airport in Vienna a terrorist commando shoots grenades against El Al counters. Two planes hijacked simultaneously. Hundreds of hostages.
- African Catwalk leads us through the intricacies of South Africa, of its society, its contradictions and its boundless energy through the revealing lens of fashion