Revó, Streaming avec sous-titres en Français, revo || Regardez tout le film sans limitation, diffusez en streaming en qualité.
This is the love story of Shirley and Luciana. The first marriage between two trans women in Latin America, thanks to the gender identity and marriage equality laws in Argentina.
In the 19th century, children -- particularly the children of the poor -- were considered to be an exploitable resource of docile and cheap labor. Anyone who had the effrontery to steal so much as a portion of a loaf of bread for any reason would (at the very least) go to prison, regardless of their age. However, people of conscience were beginning to protest against this situation. The story takes place in a prison for children where conditions are particularly harsh. The warden is a thick-headed martinet who demands complete compliance with the rules, or the children will be brutally dealt with. The assistant warden is a more modern man, and is appalled by the whole institution, but seeks to begin by reforming it. To that end, he has invited a journalist to come and see the conditions that prevail there, in the hopes that she will rouse public opinion against at least this one form of injustice.
A documentary about the life and "work" of the father of the Portuguese far-left.
Projekt Revolution: Live in Denver 2004 is a live show released by Linkin Park on April 7, 2023 in the Meteora 20th Anniversary Edition Super Deluxe Box Set. Greenwood Village, CO | Coors Amphitheatre | August 30, 2004 Setlist: Don't Stay - 00:00 Lying From You - 03:52 Papercut - 10:58 Points Of Authority - 10:58 With You - 14:23 Runaway - 17:48 Hip-Hop Medley - 22:58 Somewhere I Belong - 28:40 Figure.09 - 32:37 From The Inside - 37:25 Breaking The Habit - 40:54 Numb - 46:05 Faint (feat. Bert McCracken) - 51:06 In The End - 53:51 A Place For My Head - 58:26 Crawling - 1:05:03 Wish (Nine Inch Nails cover) - 1:11:08 One Step Closer (feat. Jonathan Davis) - 1:15:12
The invasion of Grenada by US forces in 1983 echoed around the world and put an end to a unique experiment in Caribbean politics. What were the circumstances that led to this extraordinary chain of events? Forward Ever explores the achievements and shortcomings of the People's Revolutionary Government of Grenada as it attempted to forge a new revolutionary society. The film focuses on the year 1983 and the execution of Prime Minister Maurice Bishop and his close colleagues, whose bodies were never recovered. With its multiple perspectives and different narratives, the film explores this key event in the recent history of the Caribbean and raises questions that must be answered. This comprehensive, gripping and revealing documentary tells the story of the Grenada Revolution as never before. The film features extensive unseen footage, as well as old and new interviews with many of the key players of the time including those who admitted to the killing of Prime Minister Maurice Bishop.
Revolt She Said is a documentary film interrogating ideas of feminism from an Australian and New Zealand perspective. Featuring former Prime Minister Helen Clark, ideas from the past are considered from a contemporary lens and from a female gaze. With unflinching accounts and coming out stories from the LGBTQIA+ community, the film explores the major themes of identity, gender politics, queer identity, power, women’s roles and the conceptual boundary of what a woman is. An independent film by Louise Lever, Revolt She Said examines one of the most salient and successful social movements in history. Interviews include Alison Mau, Dr Jackie Huggins, Lizzie Marvelly, Courtney Sina Meredith, Quinn Eades, Dr Pani Farvid, Jean Taylor and Ardy Tibby.
Ollie Bridgewood is on a mission; pitting classic design against modern innovation in a quest to discover the optimal pedalling system.This is the story of how clipless bicycle pedals transformed the world of bike racing. In the second installment of the GCN+ Revolution series, Ollie Bridgewood looks at the inception of clipless pedals, and the science behind one of cycling's greatest inventions. We speak to the cycling legends that made them famous; Greg Lemond and Bernard Hinault, and hear how they transformed the way they raced. We also speak from the major players in the cycling industry: Look, Shimano, and Speedplay; and discover how modern innovation through pedals is making you faster on the bike.
Who would have thought that an invention from Silicon Valley in the 1980's would have changed cycling forever! The introduction of GPS filtered down into cycling computers, providing us with information, directions and data at the handlebar. Si Richardson and Dan Lloyd are on a mission to find out just how effective GPS computers are as they go head to head, Si with his Wahoo head unit and Dan going old school, with a map! Join us for the first episode of Revolution; a GCN+ series looking at cycling's biggest game changers!
A drama set on a distant planet, where two families related by marriage are on opposite sides of a Revolutionary War-like conflict.
People's singer, songwriter, and Maoist cultural leader Khusiram Pakhrin's musical journey through nearly 4 decades of political movements and revolution in Nepal. This is the first film about Nepal's revolutionary singersongwriter Khusiram Pakhrin, and so far the only film that focuses on the songs of Nepal's Maoist movement. From the 1980s through 2006, their live performances were often banned and rarely photographed or recorded; hence we rely on Khusiram Pakhrin and his fellow performers for oral history and rare photos and footage of underground performances.
A new generation is politicizing the issues surrounding the body, sexuality and gender relations. For two friends, Nina Faure and Yéléna Perret, it starts with an awareness. With a few others, they ask themselves why, in a society that claims that gender equality is already there, access to pleasure is so difficult. They organized discussion groups, discovered Our Bodies, Ourselves, a historical feminist manual that opened new doors of analysis. They met with teachers, educators and sociologists to draw up step by step what would end up being a real plan of attack. More and more involved in the struggles that are taking place everywhere, at the heart of this feminist movement that is sweeping the world, they discover a pleasure that was unsuspected until now, that of pursuing a collective emancipation. The pleasure of abolishing patriarchy, quite simply.
Yesterday anecdotal because it was confined to a handful of winemakers and reserved for a caste of initiated consumers, the natural wine market is becoming more democratic. Perceived as a method of production and consumption that respects nature and mankind, it is arousing new vocations and reenchanting an often discredited agricultural world. From the stars to the pioneers, through the neo-winegrowers, this documentary goes on a journey of discovery of those who make today's natural wine.
Revolutions celebrates the lives of those whose worlds simply revolve around stepping out of their comfort zone, having no boundaries and redefining what's possible on two wheels. This film is dedicated to them.
Pimaï, the strong-headed anarchist, joined the navy out of bravado. But the sweet influence of a young girl leads him to prove that he is worthy of the profession he has chosen and the flag he serves.
Maël is a passionate gardener and an environmental activist. Away from big cities, sharing is time between his agricultural college, his contract of apprenticeship, and his beloved vegetable garden, Maël grows up with deep-rooted alter-globalist beliefs.
Revolution Green takes an uncompromised and revealing look at the energy crossroads America faces today through the lens of independent cinema, with the focus being on the individual choices we make.
Documentary about skinhead neo-Nazi movement.
From the personal photo album of Palestinian photographer and cinematographer, Hani Jawherieh, El Hassan reconstructs the last five minutes of Hani Jawherieh’s life, who was killed while filming in the mountains in Lebanon. The five minutes were featured in Palestine in the Eye (1977) a film made by the Palestine Film Institute to commemorate the life of one of it’s founders. Yet, forty-two years later, what motivates these images takes on a different turn in A Remake of a Revolutionary Film.
The struggle for Muslim women’s emancipation is often portrayed stereotypically as a showdown between Western and Islamic values, but Arab feminism has existed for more than a century. This groundbreaking documentary recounts Arab feminism’s largely unknown story, from its taboo-shattering birth in Egypt by feminist pioneers up through viral Internet campaigns by today’s tech-savvy young activists during the Arab Spring.