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- A behind-the-scene account of the porn world and its stars as they've never been seen before - and the no-holds-barred portrait of a true giant.
- Ben works in a morgue. Ben's wife left him and he is into various kinds of alternative sexuality. Teresa dies of an ecstasy overdose on the dance floor. When she is brought to the morgue, she is resurrected -how shall I say?- in Ben's arms (that part based on a true story). From this starting point, the film revolves around the interactions between them and Boris (orgy fan), Abdel (no sentimental life), Ducon (wants to kill himself), Nico (dying of AIDS), etc... A social study of the 90s with heavy references to sex and death.
- Belleau Wood, France, June 1918. After three weeks of battle, the US Marines stopped the German advance a few miles from Paris. They earned the name of "Devil Dogs" and made victory possible for the Allies. Gilles Lagin has given himself a mission: to preserve the memory of the American soldiers who fought in Belleau Wood. For 40 years, he has led families into the footsteps of their ancestors, the 1918 Devil Dogs.
- Based on the bestselling novel by Marc Dugain, this original docudrama weaves unique archival footage within a fictional story and sheds a new light on J. Edgar Hoover. This film reveals the FBI director's battle to retain power from the Kennedy clan. From 1960 and 1963, two ideals of America come face to face and two sets of morals clash. Clyde Tolson, Hoover's right-hand man and secret lover, is the last survivor of this psychological drama. He recounts this intense political period when America's destiny has never been as dependent on one of the most powerful and mysterious figures of the time.
- A rich man loves a poor woman. A rich mother loves her poor self. A rich city loves its poor...end
- An in-depth examination of the culture and fashion of the sneaker, from its creation as athletic wear to its place as a cornerstone in hip-hop fashion.
- 1456. Twenty-five years after Joan of Arc's death at the stake, a rehabilitation trial is opened. Like a true detective, Inquisitor Jean Bréhal, head of justice for the Church of France, will piece together the puzzle of Joan's short life, seeking out the testimonies of her childhood friends, her comrades-in-arms and her judges. A breathless investigation, from Domrémy to Rouen, via Orléans and Reims, between religious intrigue and political manipulation: "L'affaire Jeanne d'Arc", both medieval cold case and animated film, unravels the threads of a tragic epic, and draws, behind the myth, the portrait of a young woman with an incredible destiny.
- Thanks to recent archaeological discoveries, this docudrama movie association and documentary footage to rediscover the "true face" of the Gaulle. On comments from Clovis Cornillac. In 52 BC, the fortress of Alesia, Apator, a Gallic leader, is exhausted after forty days of siege. His armies prepare to load against the Roman legions who circled.
- A family secret, it's a time-bomb! Albert and Gideon form for thirty years an original 'couple': fundamentally opposed characters, they share the same house since the death of Albert's wife. When Claire, Albert's daughter, just comes and recharges her batteries with her 'parents' after two years of radio silence and a few sentimental hard times, she is not going to find the comfort she awaited for : this atypical family trio will see the secrets of a 'flower power' past resurface after its discovery by a cop as much of a sleuth as a pathetic seducer.
- Since 9/11, the US has used torture in the war on terror. But the true story started in the 50's with CIA-financed research programs on "enhanced interrogation techniques" at America's finest universities and spans to the current day on American soil. Over 70 years, the US has transformed the use of torture into state culture.
- When novelist Alessandro Battavia commits suicide, taxi driver Evangile and her brother Nord believe that they are characters imagined in a novel, probably one written by God. Because they see their lives as "merde," they go in search of God to get their story rewritten. Along the way--believing that everything is imaginary anyway--they shoot people, rob pharmacies, and tie up the residents of places where they squat. They also gather a taxi full of eccentrics, including a priest, Battavia's suicidal widow, and a policewoman; various couples pair off. Soon life imitates art: the events and ellipses seem lifted from modern fiction as the group's quest for God continues. What's real?
- Jean-Michel takes by car a hitch-hiker which are going to him to make it even of quite colors.
- An history of decolonization, told through the colonized point of view, in 3 chapters: 'Learning', 'Liberation' and 'The world is ours'
- This docudrama combines animation with archive material to tell the fascinating 800-year history of Notre-Dame cathedral in Paris.
- A vibrant portrait of Aretha Franklin, the queen of soul, who has become a symbol of freedom and power for all African American women.
- A documentary of World War I, exploring how soldiers accepted their conditions in the trenches when no clear reason had been given for the fight.
- The program breaks down the boundaries and tears down walls.
- The Vichy police, from 1940 to 1944, were the keystone of Marshal Pétain's regime and of his policy of collaboration with the German occupier.
- The pin-up is not just a pretty young woman, not so much dressed and fantasized. This popular American icon would even become a symbol of feminine claims.
- 7 filmmakers collaborate on a 6 city world-wide tour of gay life.
- Want the recipe? Take great international hits, add new generation singers and spice it up with a touch of karaoke. Finally, blend together into a marvelous hybrid composition. Irreverent and joyful.
- On the back of an international success story with his album Racine Carrée which sold more than 3 million units worldwide, Stromae toured for 2 years across 209 dates and 25+ countries. This live is the unique token of the extraordinary tour. It was shot over 2 dates at Montreal's Bell Centre in September 2015. The quality of the live footage is absolutely incredible and is true to the live experience.
- Braddock, Pennsylvania has been the home to key events that have greatly shaped American history. Today, it is struggling to reinvent itself and stay relevant.
- The image of Paris as the capital of love seems to be obvious today. However, it is only in the 19th century, with its "haussmannisation", that it acquired this title. How did this reputation impose itself on the whole world? From the grand boulevards to the banks of the Seine, through the darkness of the porte cochères, the documentary "Romantic Paris, Erotic Paris" looks back at the making of this myth and revisits, through emblematic characters and tasty archives, a century of cultural and social history. From the boudoirs of the great courtesans of the Second Empire to free love in the post-war Saint-Germain-des-Prés, through the interloper nights in the cabarets of the Occupation, a look back at a part of the history of the capital.
- Cited in the credits of more than thirty films - most of those by Francis Ford Coppola - Dean Tavoularis is one of the Hollywood's most prominent and magic production designers.
- Spring 1970, Clermont Val d'Oise Psychiatric Hospital, France. Dr Keller, an autocratic and charismatic psychiatrist, much influenced by the heady events of May '68, decides to enlist his patients in a terrorist adventure. Keller entrusts the challenging task of documenting this radical adventure to schizophrenic patient, Jean-Charles Gauthier, who believes he is in fact the German filmmaker, Leni Riefenstahl. Gauthier, an eyewitness collaborator, films the group of revolutionaries as each strange and innovative phase of their coup evolves. In less than a fortnight an unstoppable chain reaction of events unfolds in front of Gauthier's lens: firstly, Dr Keller advises his patients to stop taking their medication, next he morphs the patient's afternoon drawing workshop into a political faction meeting, similarly the pottery session is transformed into an explosives master-class, and live firearms are distributed at the Easter Sunday party. The chain of events climaxes when Keller and his co-conspirators (the patients) escape the confines of the hospital with the aim of blowing up President Pompidou's summer residence.
- The French Riviera is not only one of the most beautiful regions of France. It is also and above all a myth. Many personalities have come to sunbathe between Hyères and Menton since the beginning of the 20th century. With a commentary and appearances by Emma de Caunes in period clothing or sexy bathing suit, "Bons baisers de la Côte d'Azur" revisits numerous archives where we will find among others: F. Scott Fitzgerald, Anna de Noailles, Brigitte Bardot, Grace Kelly.
- With the strength of their arms, the men and women who shaped France's industrial power. For a long time, they included children. Often, immigrants had to be brought in to keep the factories running. All fought to invent French social standards. Thanks to exceptional archives and moving personal accounts, this grand fresco covers a century and a half of history, paying tribute to these men and women who are all too often forgotten, and have become almost invisible, despite the fact that almost a quarter of the French population are workers. Today, they are the ones who speak out in this collective film.