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1-32 of 32
- Archaeologist Ella Al-Shamahi and actor Andy Serkis bring the prehistoric hominids 'back-to-life' through animation, uncovering some surprising similarities to modern humans.
- The true story of the Christmas Day truce between opposing British and German forces that took place in No Man's Land during World War 1. Told through archive interviews and reconstructions of the event.
- Phil Spector is a pioneer of American music, a legendary producer to John Lennon and Tina Turner, and, as of April 13th 2009, a convicted murderer. Yet the Spector who appears in Vikram Jayanti's documentary is not the severe, outlandishly coiffed defendant seen in sensationalistic accounts of his trial, but a charming, savvy music executive with a generous, but arguably accurate, estimation of his place in the history of popular music.
- One of the traditions peculiar to Europe is the annual Eurovision Song Contest, in which hopeful singers from across the continent - from Slovenia to Sweden and Cyprus to Croatia - attempt to prove their nation's dominance in the field of pop music. Filmmaker Marina Zenovich (WHO IS BERNARD TAPIE?) took her cameras to host country Estonia - the winner in 2001 - to document preparations for the 2002 contest, and found a hotbed of jealous rivalries, national outrage and soap-opera-style scandals. Why did winning duo Tanel and Dave break up just weeks after their win? Why is handsome actor Mart Sander passed over for the presenter job? How does Tanel's sister react when she fails to make the cut for the 2002 contest? Through interviews and observation, Zenovich creates what the London Guardian described as "A Star is Born with extra snow." TVPG CCAP/Stereo [ref: http://sundancechannel.com/popup/index.php?ixFilmID=2074 ]
- A documentary about James Ellroy and his fascination with unsolved murder cases, especially those of his mother, and the similar, infamous, Black Dahlia murder.
- Packing their unpretentious northern humour and enduring friendship on the back of two monster motor bikes, these amiable, leather-clad hairies road out to make the best travel-cum-cookery-cum-comedy show ever seen.
- An examination of the claims made for Uri Geller's career in espionage.
- Less than 100 film critics wield enormous power in deciding the financial success of Hollywood's major motion pictures. The film takes a humorous look at one of the industry's most important award shows.
- Documentary about people who confess to murders they may not have committed.
- Dave and Si travel to the Germanic town of Swakopmund, on the Namibian coast. First on the menu is a traditional barbecue, or braai; and to find the right spot among the massive dunes, the boys take to the air in a microlight.
- The hairy bikers travel to the north of Namibia where they visit the Himba tribe, one of the last nomadic people to fully preserve their traditional way of life.
- Si and Dave travel to the Isle of Man by boat, cooking crab soufflé and sea bass on the voyage, before visiting the TT Races on the island.
- Travelling aboard an old horse-drawn caravan, Si and Dave go in search of the perfect Irish stew, on the way encountering many other Irish delicacies.
- Traveling around Romania, the bikers go to Bucharest and visit local food markets. In Targu Jiu they look at the sculptural art of Brancusi and Corvin castle, the birthplace of Dracula. Finally the boys end up with an outdoor mud bath.
- Visiting Sighisoara, the pair examine Hungarian influences on the food. The pair make dill blinis and spicy Romanian sausages before visiting a very colourful cemetery.
- Visiting Saigon, Si and Dave make shrimp and pork on sugar cane sticks, before going to a restaurant where they serve coconut worms, deep-fried scorpion and goat penis.
- With Si wearing a cast, the duo have to go by train to Hanoi, where they encounter more local dishes such as Cha Ca fish and paddy-field pork.
- Si and Dave go to Cappadocia and visit a museum of human hair, and then go to a baklawa factory. Finally they go to Sanliurfa, where they try cooking Sultan's delight.
- Near to the border with Iraq, the Hairy Bikers try making their own döner kebabs, and then go for a massage in the hammam. Finally they go to the town of Van, home of a legendary lake monster.
- The Bikers visit Oaxaca where they try garlic-fried crickets and various types of chilis. They then cook Mole Negro.
- Si and Dave go to the Chiapas mountains, where they learn to make a traditional stew. They experiment with making things with local cocoa, and then visit the Maya pyramids of Palenque.
- Si and Dave are in the world's eighth biggest country, dividing their time between the full-on urban buzz of Buenos Aires, and the beauty of a traditional estancia.
- It's time for Dave Myers and Si King to head south, leaving Buenos Aires behind as they begin their long ride to Patagonia.
- Si and Dave hop the Channel and find themselves in the alternative universe of Belgium, birthplace of surrealism and the finest chips in the world.
- Things get surreal in Brussels when Si and Dave meet a statue of Tintin and walk their way into a Magritte painting.
- The Hairy Bikers roar back into action with a madcap tour of South India, starting in Madras, now known as Chennai, a riot of hustle and bustle and colours and flavours and bullock carts, and heat, lots of heat.
- The Hairy Ones travel through the Cardamom Hills high up into tea country, where the Raj still lingers, and Si finds an astonishing piece of his family history.
- The Boys begin their adventures in Marrakech, where Si acquires a carpet and Dave acquires a King Cobra on his head.
- Si and Dave head into the film town of Ouarzazate, or "Hollywood with camels" as they describe it.
- Ella enlists the aid of a special effects company, movie star and master of performance capture Andy Serkis and experts around the world to create the world's first scientifically accurate 3D working avatar of a Neanderthal.
- Ella Al-Shamahi explores the fate of the Neanderthals - asking why they became extinct, and discovering how they live on inside of us today. The programme starts in the caves of Gibraltar, which may have been the last place the Neanderthals survived. But about 40,000 years ago they disappeared.