In the shadows of American cities, far from the promises of prosperity and comfort, countless forgotten lives struggle to survive day after day. This deeply human documentary travels through streets, shelters, abandoned corners, and invisible communities where homelessness has become a harsh and permanent reality for many U.S. citizens. Through intimate encounters and raw testimonies, the film reveals the emotional wounds, broken dreams, addiction, loneliness, and resilience hidden behind faces most people pass without noticing. Accompanied by the haunting and unmistakable voice of Tom Waits, the documentary creates an atmosphere that is both poetic and devastating, transforming this journey into an unforgettable experience filled with humanity, sorrow, dignity, and reflection. More than a portrait of homelessness, it becomes a powerful exploration of abandonment, survival, and the fragile line separating ordinary life from complete social exclusion.
A powerful investigative documentary that follows the growing wave of protests, arrests, and confrontations triggered by federal immigration raids across the United States. Through tense firsthand footage, courtroom revelations, and testimonies from protesters, lawyers, journalists, and federal officials, the film traces how demonstrations in cities like Los Angeles, Chicago, and Minneapolis spiraled into violent clashes, sweeping arrests, and accusations of extremism. As cases begin collapsing under legal scrutiny, disturbing questions emerge about the methods used during the crackdown, the reliability of official narratives, and the true cost of suppressing dissent. Blending investigative journalism with chaotic street-level reality, the documentary creates an atmosphere of mounting tension and uncertainty as ordinary citizens suddenly find themselves caught between protest movements, aggressive law enforcement tactics, and a deeply divided political climate. What begins as a story about immigration enforcement gradually becomes a gripping portrait of fear, resistance, civil liberties, and the fragile line separating public order from political intimidation.
In the final two episodes, the investigation reaches its most intense and disturbing stage as former followers finally begin revealing the full extent of the abuse, fear, and manipulation hidden inside Sam’s inner circle. A key witness opens up to Christine with shocking testimony about Sam’s crimes, while law enforcement closes in after a tense traffic stop in Flagstaff exposes how dangerous the situation has become. As the FBI prepares a major operation, the series builds toward a dramatic confrontation that changes everything for the Samuelites. Even behind bars, Sam refuses to lose control. The final episodes reveal an increasingly unbelievable chain of events involving manipulation, blind devotion, and a brazen kidnapping plot orchestrated from prison itself. At the same time, the documentary follows the emotional struggle of former followers trying to rebuild their lives after years of psychological control. These episodes deliver the most powerful revelations of the series, combining true crime, cult psychology, and emotional testimonies in a finale that feels both disturbing and deeply compelling.
For decades, one investigative journalist has forced the most powerful institutions in the United States to confront uncomfortable truths. This documentary follows Seymour Hersh as he reflects on a career spent exposing constitutional abuses, secret wars, and government cover-ups that reshaped public trust. Through archival reporting and personal insight, the film traces how his groundbreaking work challenged official narratives and altered the course of political journalism. As the story unfolds, it reveals the methods, risks, and consequences of telling truths others want buried. From explosive scoops to fierce backlash, the documentary examines the price of accountability in a system built on secrecy, offering a gripping portrait of journalism as a last line of defense for democracy.
An explosive investigation brings together 34 senior figures from the U.S. government, military, and intelligence community who claim the world has been kept in the dark for decades. Through firsthand testimony and insider access, the documentary examines allegations of an 80-year cover-up surrounding the existence of non-human intelligent life, and the hidden efforts to conceal encounters, evidence, and recovered technology. What emerges is a portrait of secrecy at the highest levels of power, challenging everything we think we know about our place in the universe. As the story unfolds, the focus shifts to a clandestine global race, where major nations are locked in a secret struggle to reverse-engineer technology of non-human origin. Beyond the shock of the revelations, the film explores the profound consequences disclosure could have for humanity’s future, while offering rare behind-the-scenes access to those leading a bipartisan push to bring the truth into the open. It is a gripping look at secrecy, power, and a reality that may be far bigger than we ever imagined.
A seemingly trivial dispute between neighbors in a quiet Florida community spirals into a fatal confrontation, exposing how quickly everyday tensions can turn deadly. Using chilling police body-camera footage and firsthand accounts, this documentary reconstructs the moments before and after the shooting, placing viewers inside a fractured neighborhood where fear, perception, and anger collide. As the investigation unfolds, the film interrogates the far-reaching consequences of Florida’s stand your ground laws. Through interviews with family members, legal experts, and law enforcement, it asks urgent questions about accountability, self-defense, and justice—revealing how a single decision can irreversibly reshape lives and ignite a national debate.
Accompanied by the haunting and unmistakable voice of Tom Waits, the documentary creates an atmosphere that is both poetic and devastating, transforming this journey into an unforgettable experience filled with humanity, sorrow, dignity, and reflection. More than a portrait of homelessness, it becomes a powerful exploration of abandonment, survival, and the fragile line separating ordinary life from complete social exclusion.