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
1-50 of 67
- The peace agreement between FARC guerrillas and the Colombian Government throws the country into chaos. What happens to a fragile peace in an unequal country if doing the 'wrong' thing may easily be justified as the only means of struggle?
- Kamal Hachkar explores the 2000-year-old Mellah in his family's village of Tinghir, Morocco, and follows the trail of the town's once substantial Jewish population to its emigres and descendants in Israel. In the film, he weaves back and forth between his city's old Jewish quarter and Israel, where he meets Sephardic Jews who still hold tight to their Moroccan identity. Presents the story of a long-term collaboration between Jews and Muslims that eventually fell apart. As Hachkar tries to understand exactly what happened, he simultaneously seeks a better way forward.
- As the world northernmost city, Norilsk is an impossible kind of place. In this Arctic city, winter lasts for nine months and temperatures plummet to -50°C. Norilsk Nickel, the first worldwide producer of copper and nickel, has dominated life since the city rose from the ashes of the Soviet gulag. More than 180,000 people manage to survive in this closed-off city isolated from the outside world. In looking at their extraordinary daily lives, this film paints a poetic portrait of an extreme city where everyone is looking for a way out.
- Ernest Hemingway, Four Weddings and a Funeral.
- This documentary focuses on the work of outsider artists like Jean Dubuffet, Hans Prinszhorn, Andre Breton and Harald Szeemann.
- About 12 million emigrants landed on Ellis Island, first outpost of the American federal immigration station in the Upper New York Bay, ultimate gateway to the United-States of America. However, when they first arrived, their fates do not belong to them. In those decisive hours, when federal immigration inspectors decided who could enter the country and who was sent home, the Melting Pot was born.
- On the African continent, the informal economy has established itself as the primary source of income for its inhabitants. The street has become a fertile ground for commerce of all kinds. Showcasing informal commercial exchanges, sidewalks and carriageway pavements constitute the place of inspiration and survival for all human resources. Today, two out of three city-dwellers make a living from resourcefulness. Everyone can find a place and build their street "business". Today, it's the only way to survive in a society in full economic development and shaken by inequalities. In Yaoundé, the capital of Cameroon, we follow the daily lives of these people who work to survive and make ends meet. Through some portraits of these street workers, we show the reality of Africa. We also learn that this continent is bubbling with energy, that its inhabitants are the main actors of their own success and that their model of society is comparable to no other because it's essentially the result of a resilient strategy of survival.