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- The Amazon is the river of superlatives: the longest - 7,025 km, the most powerful, the most indomitable - no dam possible for hundreds of kilometres. Its waters cross the largest tropical forest in the world: the Amazon, "the lungs of the earth". Going against the current of this gigantism, this documentary is betting on approaching this extraordinary natural space through one of its tiniest productions: the cocoa bean. Scientists, chocolate makers, producers and farmers, many are those who, faced with the deforestation of this unique ecosystem, use this chocolate seed to recreate, on a small scale, human exploitation in harmony with nature. This film tells us about the fight of those who decided to make cocoa the spearhead of environmental defense in Brazil.
- On the outskirts of Jerusalem, only a few kilometers from the separation wall, stands the huge hospital complex, Hadassah Ein Kerem. Here, there is no place for politics or religion. There is only one enemy: disease. In this hospital, Israeli doctors work side by side with Palestinian doctors to save the lives of children.
- The story of a revolutionary film, Que Viva Mexico, released 47 years after its shooting and 31 years after the death of its director, Sergei Eisenstein.
- Greed was a movie that went way over budget , almost killed its leading role and eventually cost Erich Von Stroheim, the director, his reputation and career as a film director.
- In the early 1960s, two movies with the major female stars of the time, Marilyn Monroe and Liz Taylor, ended bankrupting 20th Century Fox. This is the story of these two movies: Joseph L. Mankiewicz's over-priced super-production "Cleopatra" and George Cukor's unfinished "Something's Got to Give", which production tragically and abruptly stopped because of the demise of Marilyn Monroe.