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1-46 of 46
- Convinced his thesis will have him graduate with honors from Harvard University, a stuffy student finds himself at the mercy of a homeless man's demands when he holds the papers hostage.
- In 1980 New York, three young men who were all adopted meet each other and find out they're triplets who were separated at birth. But their quest to find out why turns into a bizarre and sinister mystery.
- The final sixty-seven days of Van Gogh's life are examined.
- In the personal and inspiring stories of four patients urgently searching for answers to mysterious symptoms, Below the Belt exposes widespread problems in our health care systems.
- Victoria Cruz investigates the mysterious 1992 death of black gay rights activist and Stonewall veteran, Marsha P. Johnson. Using archival interviews with Johnson, and new interviews with Johnson's family, friends and fellow activists.
- On his book tour, Michael Moore exposes more wrongdoing by greedy big businesses and callous politicians around America.
- The story of Jack Johnson, the first African-American Heavyweight boxing champion.
- Critically acclaimed documentary about the 1968 football game played by two undefeated teams from Harvard and Yale.
- Jabberwocky featured real actors and puppets and various interstitial cartoons.
- Traces the rise of life on earth from primordial ooze to the present.
- Position among the Stars, the final part of a trilogy, follows the award- winning documentaries Eye of the Day and Shape of the Moon (Joris Ivens Award IDFA 2004 - World Cinema Documentary Grand Jury Prize Sundance 2005). Through the eyes of grandmother Rumidjah, a poor old Christian woman living in the slums of Jakarta, we see the economical changing society of Indonesia and the influence of globalization reflected in the life of her juvenile granddaughter Tari and her sons Bakti and Dwi. Director and DOP Leonard Retel Helmrich follows this family in a unique way with his breathtaking Single Shot Cinema-technique. Without interviews and voice-overs, Leonard will bring you closer to Indonesia than you will ever get.
- This film follows the hunting of a giraffe by four members of the Ju/'hoansi (a !Kung Bushmen tribe) over a 13-day period in the Kalahari desert. The film consists of footage shot in 1952-53 on a Smithsonian-Harvard Peabody expedition.
- Does America's future depend on its past? An exploration of a mysterious woman's influence on George Washington, his vision for America, and its independence - a vision that could deeply influence the nation's need for healing and unity.
- Haunted by a painting of his grandparents seated in their living room, director Joseph Koerner unearths in Vienna the remarkable story behind a vanished interior.
- An appreciation and retrospective look at the songs and humour of Leeds folk singer/songwriter Jake Thackray, including performances of some of his songs.
- Harvard's sobering indictment of its own long-standing relationship with chattel slavery and anti-Black discrimination. In recent years, scholars have documented extensive relationships between American higher education and slavery. Harvard and the Legacy of Slavery, a short documentary film that accompanies a report written by leading researchers from across the university, adds Harvard to the long list of institutions, in the North and the South, entangled with slavery and its aftermath.
- In 2012, French fashion house Dior launched a web documentary on the latest Lady Dior campaigns starring Marion Cotillard.
- Anthropologist Jill Pruetz follows the chimpanzees of the Fongoli, a woodland area in Senegal, West Africa, to study their behavior. It is their unique behavior, in this unique place, that is leading scientists to new insights into the understanding of the earliest evolutionary steps taken by the human race.
- A documentary about the history of African American race films during the Golden Age of Hollywood.
- 1985–TV Episode
- The barristers revisit their investigation (from S.3 Ep.1) of the 1839 drowning of a female passenger aboard a narrowboat in Staffordshire. They learn how some high profile supporters have been enlisted in the campaign for a Royal Pardon.
- Physical behavior that results from having a constant speed of light are described.
- Scientists speculate on what higher life forms might look like on planets with environments different from earth.
- It's the ultimate question: why are we here? Cutting-edge space missions take us back 13.8 billion years to the very beginning - the origin of the Universe.
- In 1908 something felled millions of trees over 1000 square miles in Siberia, without leaving a trace. Many believe an asteroid was responsible. New evidence could at last solve the Tunguska mystery.
- This program reviews current thinking about what causes death and aging. Then it examines increasingly bizarre ideas about how to prevent them.
- 2010–201744mTV-PG7.6 (137)TV EpisodeThis program gives serious consideration to what life forms on other planets might look like founded on the vast diversity of life on earth now and in the past and what is now known about the environments on other planets found by the Kepler telescope. Then it indulges in a little speculation about what extra-terrestrial intelligence might be like.
- Scientists are on the verge of answering one of the greatest questions in history: Are we alone? Finding Life Beyond Earth immerses audiences in the sights and sounds of alien worlds, while top astrobiologists explain how these places are changing how we think about the potential for life in our solar system.
- 2010–201744mTV-PG7.4 (129)TV EpisodeAre races different on the inside as well as the outside? Is there such a thing as race at all? Or, could advances in technology create a superior race? The answers to these questions may tell us where humanity is headed.
- 2010–201744mTV-PG7.3 (106)TV EpisodeWhat if death wasn't the end? Resurrecting bodies isn't enough. To truly live again, we must also resurrect our minds. Scientists are developing ways to digitally preserve the contents of our brains. We may rise again as software, embedded in new forms.
- The Arrival has ended. A swarm of small spacecraft depart their huge mothership, and hover in our atmosphere. The ships open their hatches, and deposit thousands of mysterious pods on the earth's surface. Are they are message, a gift or a weapon?
- Brian Cox and Dara O Briain raise the stakes in the final night of their astronomy extravaganza, and reveal the results of their viewers' challenge to find undiscovered galaxies at the edge of space.
- The mysteries and secrets of nature's single dads.