A harrowing yet essential documentary uncovers the avoidable disaster that claimed 72 lives in one of the UK’s worst residential fires. Through powerful testimonies of survivors, families and firefighters, the film reveals how a series of decisions—by authorities, contractors and building managers—turned a seemingly routine refurbishment into a catastrophic inferno. Exploring decades of warnings ignored, regulatory failure and corporate negligence, the documentary stitches together hidden emails, inquiry evidence and personal pain to show exactly how this tragedy wasn't just a fire, but a systemic collapse. It is both a memorial for the lost and a call for justice for those still fighting the consequences.
Produced by Steven Spielberg and narrated by Morgan Freeman, this captivating documentary series traces the extraordinary evolutionary journey of dinosaurs, revealing how these remarkable creatures rose from humble beginnings to dominate Earth for hundreds of millions of years. Through cutting-edge science, stunning visual reconstructions, and the latest fossil discoveries, it explores their origins, ecological importance, astonishing diversification, and the dramatic events that ultimately led to their extinction. From fragile early ancestors to the colossal giants that ruled prehistoric landscapes, the series unveils the epic story of the rise and fall of one of the most successful groups of animals in Earth’s history. In the first two episodes, the story begins with a small, fuzzy creature that emerges around 235 million years ago in a dangerous world filled with chaotic climates and deadly reptilian predators. Against overwhelming odds, its lineage survives and evolves into the first true dinosaurs. When a devastating mass extinction wipes out rival species, dinosaurs seize the opportunity to flourish, growing larger, developing longer necks, and evolving remarkable defenses such as body armor as they spread across the planet.
This high-stakes documentary follows climber Alex Honnold as he attempts the unthinkable: scaling Taipei 101, one of the tallest skyscrapers on Earth, without ropes or safety gear—and doing it live. With cameras rolling in real time, every movement becomes a moment of tension, turning a feat of athletic precision into a global spectacle where a single mistake could be fatal. As the climb unfolds, the film pulls viewers inside Honnold’s mindset, revealing the discipline, focus, and psychological control required to face extreme exposure hundreds of meters above the city. Blending vertigo-inducing visuals with the immediacy of live broadcast, it becomes a gripping meditation on risk, human limits, and what drives someone to push beyond fear in front of the world.
In his mid-eighties, when many believed his journey was winding down, David Attenborough embarked on a bold new chapter in natural history filmmaking. This adventure traces the epic story of life on Earth, from the first organisms that flourished on ancient seabeds hundreds of millions of years ago to the astonishing biodiversity of today. Revisiting iconic landscapes and harnessing cutting-edge technology, Attenborough reveals how our planet’s living tapestry was shaped across deep time. The three episodes can be enjoyed together in a single continuous viewing, creating one sweeping journey across continents and oceans. From the Galápagos Islands to the caves of Borneo, from China’s ancient tropics to the Great Barrier Reef, the series follows Attenborough’s global quest to understand how life rose, adapted, and endured. It is a grand exploration of evolution, resilience, and the fragile beauty of the world we inherit.
Physicist Bob Lazar claims he was recruited in the late 1980s to work at a secret facility known as S4, near Area 51, where his task was to study and reverse-engineer advanced craft of unknown origin. With a background linked to Los Alamos, he describes in detail the technology he encountered, including propulsion systems unlike anything publicly known and materials that seem to defy conventional physics. Through his testimony, archival footage and interviews, the film reconstructs what he says happened inside one of the most secretive programs ever alleged. As his story unfolds, it raises concrete questions about classified research, government secrecy and whether some technological breakthroughs may already exist beyond public reach.
In July 1970, Jimi Hendrix stepped onto the stage of the Atlanta Pop Festival before an audience of more than 300,000 people—the largest American crowd of his career. This film presents rare, restored footage of that historic Independence Day performance, where he delivered unforgettable renditions of classics like Hey Joe, Voodoo Child (Slight Return), and The Star-Spangled Banner. Alongside the music, interviews with Hendrix, his bandmates Mitch Mitchell and Billy Cox, and contemporaries such as Paul McCartney provide insight into his artistry and state of mind at the time. Framed against the cultural backdrop of Vietnam, civil rights struggles, and the countercultural movement, this documentary captures not only a milestone concert, but also the moment Hendrix became both a symbol and a voice for a restless generation.
Exploring decades of warnings ignored, regulatory failure and corporate negligence, the documentary stitches together hidden emails, inquiry evidence and personal pain to show exactly how this tragedy wasn't just a fire, but a systemic collapse. It is both a memorial for the lost and a call for justice for those still fighting the consequences.