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1-50 of 121
- The merciless 1970s rivalry between Formula One rivals James Hunt and Niki Lauda.
- 'They would say that wouldn't they' - recounting the events of 'The Profumo Affair', including contemporary interviews with Christine Keeler and Johnny Edgecombe, plus Lord Denning.
- With female pubic hair becoming a taboo in recent years, Chidera Eggerue grows hers for the first time in years for a public exhibition and explores the attitude to it.
- Designer, architect and town planner, Charlotte Perriand marked the 20th century. A pioneer of social and committed architecture, this collaborator at Le Corbusier has created furniture with sober elegance that has become icons.
- When the dust settles, culture remains...The Maralinga people survive aggressive colonisation, including dispossession to enable atomic testing, and through their tenacious spirit and cultural strength fight to retain their country.
- A TV documentary that recounts the many "battles" (guerres) Coco Chanel overcame to become the great businesswoman and legend she is considered today.
- This fanciful film playfully documents Wyman's celebrated life. From his impoverished childhood of England. through the early years of the Stones, to his relationship with longtime girlfriend Astrid and his current obsession with computers.
- Making use of his family's home movies, Prince Charles shares his memories of the private side of his mother, the Queen.
- Examining how the Nazis corrupted the teachings of Christianity to influence people to see Hitler as a messiah-like figure. Also, examines accusations that the Pope did too little to oppose them.
- Paris unter deutscher Besatzung: Während die Franzosen im Alltag vom Nazi-Terror bedroht sind, herrscht auf dem Kunstmarkt Hochstimmung. Was sich in dem berühmten Aktionshaus Hôtel Drouot vollzieht, ist ein unheilvoller, skrupelloser Handel: Unzählige der dort eingehenden Werke stammen aus dem Besitz jüdischer Familien, die durch deutsche An- und Verordnungen beraubt wurden. Unter der NS-Besatzung erlebte der Kunstmarkt in Frankreich einen unerhörten Boom. Zwischen 1940 und 1944 sollen etwa 100.000 Kunstwerke, Kunst- und Kulturgegenstände von Frankreich nach Deutschland gebracht worden sein. In langjähriger Arbeit hat die französische Autorin und Kunsthistorikerin Emmanuelle Polack diesem gigantischen kriminellen Kunsttransfer nachgespürt und neue Ergebnisse zutage gefördert. Ihre Indizien führen zu Galeristen, Sammlern, Händlern, Vertretern des NS-Regimes, Versteigerern, Konservatoren und einfachen Mittelsleuten. Den historischen Hintergrund bilden die von der Vichy-Regierung unter Marschall Pétain erlassenen antisemitischen Gesetze, die im besetzten Frankreich galten und von den französischen Behörden durchgesetzt wurden. Tausende von Kunstwerken aus dem Besitz verfolgter und deportierter Juden wurden geraubt oder zu Spottpreisen erworben. Ein blinder Fleck des kollektiven Gedächtnisses, der an die aktuelle Restitutionsdebatte anknüpft. Erst 2020 begann der Louvre genauer zu überprüfen, welche Kunstwerke während der Okkupation vom Museum erworben wurden. In Deutschland wurden, ebenfalls 2020, drei Werke der Sammlung Dorville an die Familie von Armand Dorville zurückgegeben, aufgefunden bei Cornelius Gurlitt (1932-2014), dem Sohn und Erben von Hildebrand Gurlitt (1895-1956), der ab 1940 vor allem in Paris einer von Hitlers Haupteinkäufern für das geplante Führermuseum ("Sonderauftrag Linz") im damals zum Großdeutschen Reich gehörenden Linz gewesen war. Linz ist gut hundert Kilometer von Braunau am Inn entfernt, wo Adolf Hitler 1889 geboren wurde.
- A unique celebration of the Queen's ninety years as she reaches her landmark birthday in April. Film-maker John Bridcut has been granted special access to the complete collection of Her Majesty's personal ciné films, shot by the Duke of Edinburgh and the Queen herself, as well as by King George VI and Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother. Much of it has never been seen publicly before. Various members of the Royal Family are filmed watching this private footage and contributing their own personal insights and their memories of the woman they know both as a member of their own close family and as queen. Among those taking part are the Prince of Wales, the Duke of Cambridge, Prince Harry, the Princess Royal, the Duke of Kent and his sister Princess Alexandra, who has never before given an interview.
- The story of the pioneering Dick Kerr Ladies football team which rose to prominence during the First World War.
- Documentary telling the story of the 1951 Festival of Britain, which in a period of austerity showed how to carve out a bright new future through design and ingenuity.
- The human voice has evolved over 200,000 years. Not even the most advanced computer synthesizers and talking robots ever devised can begin to reproduce its extraordinary complexity and emotional power. But recently, scientists have made a remarkable discovery with disturbing implications - we respond to even the most artificial voices as though they are real, using the same parts of our brains to interact with machines as we do with other humans.
- PROMISE brings us to Vilna in the interwar period. In spite of her poverty a mother foretell a bright future for Romain, her 10-year-old son. The only one to believe her words is the aging Mr. Piekielny - but he also forces the boy to make him a curious promise: a promise that only time can tell if Romain will keep. This piece of reality is described by the French diplomat and writer, Romain Gary, in his autobiography, Promise At Dawn. The three directors made a promise to each other and transformed this into the film, PROMISE.
- Documentary charting the rise, fall and rise again of veteran British DJ Tony Blackburn.
- For over 45 years the major military powers of the east and west faced each other with their hands on the trigger. The Berlin Airlift, The Berlin Wall, The Korean War and events in Cuba, Africa, Hungary, Vietnam and Czechoslovakia were all to form part of the greater picture of The Cold War.
- Brief summary of the Berlin airlift taken from newsreel material.
- Nearing the ice-packs of the Arctic, the American nuclear-powered Submarine "Skate" submerged. A 12-day, 3,000-mile trip under the Polar regions lay ahead. The voyage, under Commander James Calvert, was of great strategic importance. "Skate" came up right at the North Pole itself. Here, the ashes of Sir Hubert Wilkins, the Australian explorer, were scatted over the icy wastes, in accordance with his wishes. He'd aimed to take a submarine under the Pole some thirty years ago.
- A justification of the Anglo-French 'intervention' in Suez.
- Dave Woods looks back at the memorable 1968 Rugby League Challenge Cup Final at Wembley Stadium between Wakefield Trinity and Leeds when the appalling weather led to one of the most dramatic finales in British sporting history.
- HM The Queen's tour of Pakistan in 1961. Shows people of Karachi cheering the Queen as she drives with President Ayub Khan; and among other things a visit to the site of the memorial to Mahomed Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan.
- Daniele Hamamdjian reflects on covering Queen Elizabeth's platinum jubilee celebrations that mark her historic 70-year reign the recent turmoil within the royal family, and the prospect of Prince Charles someday taking the throne.
- Sir Hubert Wilkins gives his views and hopes about his forthcoming submarine expedition to the North Pole.
- The distinguished explorer tells of recent expedition.
- Family photos give an intimate portrait of Britain's post-war social history, with each generation having a different camera to tell their story. New technologies and evolving social attitudes inspired the nation to pick up a camera.
- This film is about WWII and it outlines the situation from D-Day to the capture of Paris. It follows the war front in the European front.
- Documentary on the twelve months from July 1943 to June 1944 during World War II in Europe.
- Sir Hubert Wilkins getting out of airliner. Close ups and speech. He is about to set out on search for lost Soviet Polar airmen.
- A 1953 British documentary about Queen Elizabeth II.
- An intimate portrait of Labour politician Denis Healey by political journalist Michael Cockerill. Shown as an obituary and a tribute following his death at the age of 98 on 3 October 2015.
- The Queen's seven day tour of Turkey in October 1971.