Voirfilm Revolutio, Streaming avec sous-titres en Français, revolutio || Regardez tout le film sans limitation, diffusez en streaming en qualité.
Narrated by Deocampo in English, the film documents the anti-Marcos revolution, the life of Oliver (a transvestite who was the subject of the first film in the trilogy), child prostitution, and the filmmaker's own personal history, including his homosexuality, his filmmaking, and his travels abroad.
The award-winning film documents the amazing, true-life adventures of Billy Meier, the only proven UFO contactee.
This is not a Rockumentary. You can’t sell 1000 tickets to a show and then make a Rockumentary. No one cares. But what if you and your best friend had spent 5 years playing in the middle of the mall a few blocks down from the venue? What if you had spent 10 years chasing down the version of yourself you felt you could become, but never did, until now? What if for 90 minutes you DIDN’T feel like no one was listening ... like for the first time in your life the experience matched the potential and you had actually achieved something that matched the goal you set for yourself in high school? You still shouldn’t make a Rockumentary, and you might consider changing your goal. In this 90 minute Live Show-Rockumentary-Fourth-Wall-Breaking-Future Hunt, Winterbourne’s dynamic live show is interwoven with moments between fictional ‘present’ Jordan and the camera, as he and James walk themselves through their own story in an attempt to make sense of it.
The Ave Valley is, for more than a century, a territory seized by an imposing industry. Amongst ruins and operating factories, we descend the river on a journey alongside the banks of the present, unveiling the marks of the past.
For his latest video, Industrial Revolutions, Danny MacAskill heads to an old ironworks and railway yard in the Scottish countryside where he makes the most of the crumbling masonry and train carriages with a blinding display of skill and balance.
In this revolutionary (see what we did there?) show, Steel tells us in a hilarious fashion what happened in France between the storming of the Bastille and the rise of Napoleon - bringing to life the people who made them happen. Brilliantly insightful and full of laughs, it puts the peculiarity of individual people back at the centre of the story.
Filmmaker Steve York explores the controversial 2004 Ukrainian presidential election, during which candidate Viktor Yushchenko suffered a near-fatal poisoning and his unpopular opponent, Viktor Yanukovych, was declared the winner. In the aftermath, more than a million people -- including the ailing Yushchenko -- took to the streets of Kiev, protesting the results that contradicted exit polls showing Yushchenko with an impressive lead.
Bonus DVD from the Hybrid Theory: 20th Anniversary Edition.
This video essay is a poetic attempt at desacralising the omnipresent figure of Nabih Berri, head of the Lebanese parliament for 30 years and a symbol of the corrupt Lebanese politicoeconomic system. It was produced in July 2020 for "Rehla"’s 12th issue entitled "Distancing".
In a disused hospital pantry in the 1940s, an Australian doctor discovered an astonishing treatment for bi-polar disorder (or manic-depression, as it was then known). It would change the way we think about mental illness and mark the beginning of psychopharmacology - using drugs to manage psychiatric conditions. It would take 20 years of struggle before lithium treatment was finally accepted, but the scientists and psychiatrists who followed Cade's lead persevered. Their work has meant a chance at stability for hundreds of thousands of people around the world, and lithium remains the benchmark for bi-polar treatment today.
A radical film about a radical woman. Martin Durkin's controversial thesis is that Margaret Thatcher was a working class revolutionary. She believed that capitalism was in the interests of ordinary people, not the toffs. Many ordinary people agreed. And that is why the left hated her so much - Margaret Thatcher stole the working class. This feature-length film includes interviews with the Prime Minister, Norman Tebbit, Nigel Lawson, Cecil Parkinson, Neil Kinnock, Bernard Ingham and many others close to Mrs Thatcher.
This is the story of a Parisian building guard who returns to the Comoros to overthrow a dictator. Fatima Oussoufa has been living in France for over 20 years. As a janitor in a building in the 19th arrondissement of Paris, she is in charge of cleaning and receiving packages. She keeps the elderly company and plays with the children. She shares her good mood with all the inhabitants of the building. What they don't know is that she has a double life. Every weekend, on the Place de la République, Fatima harangues the crowd with vehemence, she speaks out against the dictatorship in the Comoros. This African archipelago, a former French colony, has been mired in poverty and political instability for decades. It is now ruled with an iron fist by Colonel Azali Assoumani. Fatima's goal: to bring down the regime and bring back democracy to her people.