This film is a collection of images from the Po River valley. Within it lie trains, old country houses and new factories, cultivated fields, and the noise of machinery. Everything moves forward and grows old, with the river watching it all drift by.
A filmmaker accidentally comes across a ruined village where silent souls refuse to revive the past. The remnants of a film shot years earlier constitute the only clue to understanding what once happened there.
In 1996, a ragtag team of Scottish scientists changed history by creating Dolly the sheep - the first ever mammal clone. From global fame to moral uproar, this is Dolly’s story.
A photographic exploration of Queens’ unconventional architecture reveals the borough’s beauty through the eyes of an architect while uncovering the deeper history behind its strange and spectacular designs.
As the full-scale war in Ukraine forces millions to flee, rescuers move in the opposite direction - toward destroyed villages, active shelling, and mined roads - to save animals left behind when humans are forced to escape.
An intimate story about the construction of identity and the consequences of defying gender norms within Mexico's conservative upper-middle-class society. The Way You See Me traces a ten-year journey from hyperfemininity toward a defiant masculinity. What began as an experiment to challenge the idea that testosterone justifies male behaviour gradually evolved into something far more complex, confronting the filmmaker's body, voice, relationships and sense of self. But the personal keeps opening onto the political. Conservative upper-middle-class Mexican society doesn't just shape us into rigid gender roles; it recruits us as enforcers of those roles too, compelling us to monitor and regulate one another. Shot over a decade, this is one of the most comprehensive and candid explorations of what it means to transition, revealing the intertwined power dynamics between class, gender and systemic violence in Mexican society.
Béal is a 16 mm film that explores the intertwined histories, communities, and daily lives of Toronto’s Cabbagetown and Regent Park. Extending to the Don Valley and Don River—lands and waterways long used by Indigenous peoples as gathering, fishing, and travel routes—the film situates these neighbourhoods within a deeper landscape of history and movement. Later shaped by Irish immigration during the 1847 famine, the area evolved through poverty, working-class settlement, and the creation of Regent Park as Canada’s first large-scale social housing project. Today, cycles of redevelopment and gentrification continue to transform the neighbourhoods, bringing new tensions and challenges. Through intimate collaborations with residents and community workers, Béal reflects on resilience, displacement, and the enduring connections between past and present in the city’s changing urban fabric.
After getting a promotion, Dennis gets invited to his boss's house for dinner, which turns into a living nightmare when Dennis eats corn the "wrong" way.
Midori Wakui, a private tutor, harbored special feelings for her student's mother, Saori. Midori seized every opportunity to seduce Saori when they were alone. Saori, too, was drawn to Midori, but her sense of responsibility as a mother kept her resisting. After a quiet yet intense battle of wits, the two finally crossed the line. Just then, Saori's father, Koudai, returned home after a long business trip, creating tension in the intimate atmosphere between them.
A heartfelt coming-of-age drama about a young man who unexpectedly encounters his 12-year-old self, leading him to reflect on his childhood frustrations and rediscover the immeasurable love, sacrifices, and memories left behind by his late mother.
The long-awaited finale to NEOT! Will the cast finally make a funny joke? Will Mappy return again? And will the sloppily constructed lore finally coalesce into something somewhat coherent? There's only one way to find out!
An unpredictable but joyous collection of weather-related chart hits, courtesy of two of the BBC’s most formidable forecasters, Carol Kirkwood and Tomasz Schafernaker. It’s a selection that covers all conditions, from Ain’t No Sunshine When She’s Gone, to Why Does It Always Rain on Me, sprinkled throughout with fun facts and crucial context from Carol and Tomasz - clearly relishing this chance to step away from weather charts and test out the music charts.
On a rescue mission to save the piano, a passionate piano tuner meets a diverse mix of owners and their pianos – revealing their stories and relationship with the instrument.