Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-6 of 6
- In 1981 in Medjugorje (BA), a group of kids claim that Virgin Mary appeared to them on a hill. The local priest believes them and spreads the word. Religious tourism blossoms. The communist government is concerned and arrests the priest.
- A woman who lost most of her family during the war in Croatia and breakup of Yugoslavia is informed a decade later that her son has been found.
- A travel and adventure show designed for youth soccer enthusiasts and their families. The series provides soccer tips, trivia, interviews with world renowned soccer coaches and pro soccer clips. Shot in countries throughout the world including Mexico, Morocco, Portugal, and the USA, the unique series also emphasizes culture, adventure, sports, healthy living and peace among the various people of our planet.
- "Spiritual Trekking" is a series that explores spiritual and paranormal activities occurring in the world today. It delves deeply into spiritual and prophetic messages emerging from different areas of the globe, and from a variety of religious groups.
- "Road to the Women's World Cup" was a stand-alone television program leading up to the Women's World Cup. It highlights top women professional soccer players from around the globe. It was filmed at The Home Depot Center in Los Angeles, California.
- August 24, 1942. Trapped by history, a loving mother writes a farewell letter to her son just days before she dies in the Thereseinstadt concentration camp during the Holocaust. Lost for nearly 50 years, the letter mysteriously reaches her son in 1985 when he is 79 years old. The Fate Did Not Let Me Go film shares the inspiring story of Valli Ollendorf and her timeless letter to her son Ulrich. More than a mother's farewell, the letter's message of faith, hope and love stands as a triumph of the human spirit in history's darkest hour. For years, the letter remained a family secret. When Ulrich passed away, his family asked their rabbi to read the letter at his eulogy. The impact of the letter - and its expression of love that transcended time and space and even death itself - was so grat that the family realized it was much more than a private letter. It was a letter that could inspire every person it touched.