Voirfilm A Day To Die, Streaming avec sous-titres en Français, day || Regardez tout le film sans limitation, diffusez en streaming en qualité.
A loving father of two fights to keep his sanity and his family as his husband's mind slips away from complications sustained in an accident.
All Japan Pro Wrestling's October Giant Series rolls on with an epic clash between Mitsuharu Misawa and Kenta Kobashi.
AJPW's annual October Giant Series comes to a close. Mitsuharu Misawa makes his first title defense against his tag team partner Toshiaki Kawada.
Kiko the Kangaroo has problems with his house cleaning when Ozzie the Ostrich keeps getting in his way...
A music and costume filled portrayal of the 1976 Gay Pride Parade by filmmaker Tom Palazzolo. All is fun and games until a bystander hurls an egg at Palazzolo's camera lens. It resumes quickly though.
Green Day played the Woodstock festival on the South Stage on August 14, 1994, 6 months after their first major-label album Dookie was released. The performance was one of the most memorable of the festival, with the band getting involved in a mud fight with their fans.
Elam films her close friend, Chuck Kleinhans.
A man's last night of freedom. We watch as he desperately tries to sort out his affairs before imprisonment. Short film shot in Edinburgh in 2007.
The story of Lebanese civilians and resistance in a southern village, Ayta El Shaab, facing the IDF during July War 2006.
The Summer Heat Tour kicks off in Hopkins, Minnesota, headlined by a ROH World Title match between Michael Elgin and Matt Hardy.
The final show for Mary's Blood before their hiatus.
The story of the New York writer and Catholic anarchist who at the height of the Depression unwittingly created what would become a worldwide peace and social justice movement.
After a lifetime of caring for others, a pioneering couple reflect on the utopia that shaped their families. This sheds light on the unsung heroes of our communities and how our attitudes toward the care of those with special needs is changing - for better or for worse
Lying on the coast of Cape Town - South Africa's most segregated city - there is one public space where everyone does seem to come together: the Sea Point Promenade and Municipal Pools. Set between city and ocean, this beautiful strip of "everymansland" offers a quirky and often entertaining mix of class, race, gender and religion: a place where South Africans of all backgrounds can experience happiness together... But is all as it appears? SEA POINT DAYS presents an unusual and impressionistic record of life at Cape Town's Sea Point Promenade and municipal pools, using largely cinematic vignettes to explore issues of belonging, integration, nostalgia, happiness and identity in an ex-white South African neighbourhood.
This personal and experimental film juxtaposes scenes of home video recordings with letters from the director’s mother sent 20 years later. The director’s decision to leave the family’s faith results in an ultimatum from her mother, a devout Jehovah’s Witness: either return to Jehovah or never see her again. As the choices are revealed, the film discovers what has been lost and questions why subsequent generations often repeat the past.
Alexandra Rose Day is a charity fundraising event, inaugurated in 1912 on the 50th anniversary of the arrival in England of Alexandra of Denmark for her marriage to the future King Edward VII. This charming film follows a cheerful band of women in Peckham, London, as they sell artificial roses to raise funds for local hospitals.
On June 5, 1967, fourteen hostile armies from three huge Arab nations suddenly descended upon the state of Israel from every side and direction. Yet in just six days, this tiny country not only defended herself, but won a decisive victory that changed the map of the Middle East.
In the midst of a religious society, FARA doesn’t know whether she has feelings for boys or girls; after being raped by her boyfriend, witnessing her mother being abused by her father, and a misunderstood kiss between her and her best friend.
UCLA student film that dramatizes the wartime eviction of a Japanese American farming family. Silent scenes of a family of five (presumably two Issei parents and their three Nisei children) eating, packing their possessions, making musubi for the voyage, and other preparations for removal are accompanied by first-person narration by a female voice, presumably the daughter of the family. The film begins with the words of John DeWitt read in his voice justifying the need for the forced removal of Japanese Americans. Moving Day is one of the first—if not the first—film by a Japanese American that depicts the travails of World War II.