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RELIVE DANNY BOYLE'S 2012 OPENING CEREMONIES A NIGHT TO REMEMBER - LONDON 2012 is a documentary featuring extended extracts from the 2012 London Olympics opening ceremony. On 27 July 2022, for the 10th anniversary of the London Olympics, a newly cut version of Danny Boyle’s Opening Ceremonies for both Olympics and Paralympics will be shown as a one-off to raise money and awareness for treatment and research into brain cancer through the Tessa Jowell Foundation. The Tessa Jowell Foundation is aiming to raise £4 million to make sure that every NHS brain cancer patient can access excellent care and to develop a new children’s brain cancer centre of excellence programme. Proceeds of this screening will be donated to the foundation.
Acclaimed Irish tenor John McDermott delivers a stirring performance that shows off his powerful vocal range in this 2001 show, recorded at Canada's Living Arts Center and originally broadcast on public television. The emotional concert features 16 songs all touching on the concepts of memory, family and patriotism, including "Try to Remember," "Ye Banks and Brass of Bonnie Doon" and the poignant World War I number "Christmas in the Trenches."
This two-part documentary celebrates Detroit's history through rare film clips, interviews and archival photographs, examining in detail the city's longstanding ties with the automobile industry and Motown music. Segments also focus on the architectural development of downtown Detroit -- including stops at nostalgic spots like Belle Isle, Jefferson Beach and the Vernor's soda fountain -- as well as the city's most famous former residents.
Remember Shakti is a quintet which combines elements of traditional Indian music with elements of jazz. The band consists of English guitarist John McLaughlin, Zakir Hussain (tabla), U. Srinivas (mandolin), Shankar Mahadevan (vocals), and V. Selvaganesh (kanjira, ghatam, mridangam), who are all of Indian descent. The band's name is derived from John Mclaughlin's acoustic Indian fusion band Shakti which was active in the 1970s.
Introduction to the Holocaust: Footballers Remember is a short educational film based on the historic visit in June 2012 by the England football squad to the site of the Nazi concentration and death camp Auschwitz-Birkenau in Poland. Using both historical footage and contemporary interviews with members of the England squad, Introduction to the Holocaust: Footballers Remember stimulates students’ interest in the topic and sets the stage for a more in-depth unit of study.
Quebec’s citizens are divided by different histories, sources of pride and grievances. Young people experience Quebec differently than seniors, who lived through decades of religious and linguistic conflict. Québécois living in the regions often see Montreal as a foreign metropolis. Quebec is increasingly the story of immigrants, the distinctly labelled Allophones, who think it is time for old-stock Francos and Anglos to get over their long-lost wars of conquest to deal with the urgent problems of the 21st century. What We Choose to Remember explores the things that make Quebec so fascinating, frustrating and different.
A widowed husband comes to terms with the loss of his wife as he writes a speech for her funeral.
After Andrea suddenly shows up at his compound, Michael struggles to figure out what's real as he remembers his past with her.
Taiwanese romance film.
Told through the tales of love of a retiring film projectionist and a late-blooming actress, the short documentary delves into the journey of Manila’s oldest movie theater from grandiosity to obsolescence.
When you look at a river, what do you see? Remembering Holland by Jan Wouter van Reijen carries the viewer through the basin of the River Waal, past painters, sculptors and poets. Van Reijen follows the entire course of the river, from the German border to the North Sea, and creates portraits of various artists who have taken the riverine landscape as their theme. Each and every one of them sings the river’s praises in his or her own way, from extremely realistic to abstract. At every spot along the way, and each day anew, the river landscape changes: we see the water dark and colorful, glistening in late and early light, in morning dew and by moonlight, in clouds of mist and the snows of winter. Yet the water brings more than beauty alone. The flooding of the forelands and the reinforcement of the dykes in 1995 remind us of the eternal struggle of the Dutch against the rising water. See it and be borne along on a voyage of the imagination.
"What the axe forgets, the trees remember." The Tree Remembers presents the current situation in Malaysia where the racial policy is still practiced and the victims are forced to remain silent. This film re-examines the origin of racism in Malaysia and the taboo of racial riot in 1969.
The film tells the story of Lidice village, levelled and–literally–eradicated by the Nazis in retaliation for the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich in Prague. However, despite the heavy death toll it paid, the Czech village was not only erased from the map but constitutes a symbol in the fight against Fascism.
In July 2002, the illustrator Daniel Maja is invited to Ramallah and Gaza to develop a project for art schools in Palestine, despite the fact that most West Bank cities are under curfew at the time. Dominique Dubosc, the filmmaker, decides to accompany him. The film develops according to their two gazes, which play one against the other, or with the other, in two mediums, throughout the journey.
A short film by Joe Daniel Lynch that acts a visual memorial for Junko Furuta, the angel who went through 44 days of Hell. Rest in Paradise.