When an incurable diagnosis shatters the future they had imagined, two poet lovers choose not to retreat into silence, but to confront the unknown with words, wit, and fierce tenderness. As hospital rooms replace ordinary routines, their shared language becomes both shield and sanctuary, transforming fear into art and vulnerability into connection. What begins as a confrontation with mortality unfolds into a deeply human meditation on love, resilience, and the fragile beauty of being alive. Through intimate conversations, flashes of unexpected humor, and moments of raw honesty, the film captures how creativity can illuminate even the darkest chapters. It is not simply a story about illness, but about how two souls refuse to let a diagnosis define the depth of their bond. Moving, poetic, and quietly life-affirming, this is a portrait of love seen in its truest light—when time feels short, and every moment matters.
In a world where convenience rules what lands on our plates, this eye-opening investigation pulls back the curtain on the true cost of our modern food economy. What once promised abundance and innovation has morphed into a system where a few powerful corporations hold the reins, shaping government policy, squeezing farmers, and prioritizing profit over people. The result is a food supply that is astonishingly efficient yet painfully vulnerable — and deeply tied to a global health crisis fueled by ultra-processed products. With incisive reporting and compelling voices from leading food system critics, this urgent follow-up dives deeper into how profit-driven consolidation has rewired what we eat and how it’s made. Through revealing stories from workers, families, and the experts who dared to investigate, it challenges everything we think we know about food, health, and corporate control — and urges viewers to rethink the cost of what ends up on our tables.
The rainforest is home to more species of plants and animals than any other habitat on the planet. But for humans, life there is not as easy as it looks. Life in the trees requires great skill, ingenuity and sheer bravery. The Matis of Brazil carve 4-metre-long blow-pipes to hunt monkeys - in near total silence. Deep in the Congo forests, Tete defies death by scaling a giant tree using nothing more than a liana vine, and he must then negotiate an angry swarm of bees - all to collect honey for his family. Three children from Venezuela's Piaroa tribe venture deep into the jungle to hunt tarantulas - to toast for lunch! In West Papua the Korowai tribe show-off their engineering skills by building a high-rise home 35 metres up in the tree tops. Most memorable of all, in Brazil we join a unique monitoring flight in search an un-contacted tribe...
Through intimate conversations, flashes of unexpected humor, and moments of raw honesty, the film captures how creativity can illuminate even the darkest chapters. It is not simply a story about illness, but about how two souls refuse to let a diagnosis define the depth of their bond. Moving, poetic, and quietly life-affirming, this is a portrait of love seen in its truest light—when time feels short, and every moment matters.