After seven years of sobriety, Charlie Sheen looks back with striking honesty on a life lived at full speed. This documentary traces his meteoric rise from rebellious ’80s heart-throb to global TV superstardom, and the excesses that fueled his fame before leading to a very public collapse. Through candid conversations and rare reflections, the film reveals the magnetic charm, chaos, and contradictions that defined an era of celebrity culture. Family members and close friends share untold stories, including former spouses Denise Richards and Brooke Mueller, exposing the personal cost of life in the spotlight. Viewers can watch both episodes together as a single, continuous story, following Sheen’s fall at the height of his hit series and his hard-earned path toward accountability and redemption. It is a raw portrait of fame, addiction, and the possibility of change when the cameras finally stop rolling.
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.
This behind-the-scenes documentary offers an exclusive first look at HBO’s new television adaptation of the Harry Potter books, discovering how a new series is being built for a new generation. Narrated by Nick Frost, who plays Hagrid in the series, it opens the doors to the creative process behind the first season, from the search for the new young cast to the design of Hogwarts, the teachers, the costumes, the creatures and the magical world being carefully reimagined for television. Through interviews with key cast members and craftspeople, the documentary reveals the scale, responsibility and emotion behind bringing such an iconic story back to the screen. It is a fascinating preview for anyone curious about how the filmakers intends to transform the beloved books into a long-form series, showing the artistic care, technical ambition and enormous pressure involved in creating a new version of this legendary universe.
A cult expert and her documentary filmmaker husband move into a secretive fundamentalist Mormon community linked to the polygamist FLDS movement, expecting to document a troubled religious group but soon uncovering something far more disturbing. At the center of the growing tension is Samuel Bateman, a self-proclaimed prophet who claims to be the successor to imprisoned cult leader Warren Jeffs. As the couple gains the trust of isolated followers, they uncover disturbing evidence of psychological control and a dangerous system hidden behind promises of faith and salvation. The documentary reveals the growing power of fanaticism and blind devotion inside one of America’s most controversial religious sects. In the first two episodes of the series, Christine and Tolga settle inside the isolated community and quickly become suspicious of Bateman’s growing influence over vulnerable followers. As they secretly record testimonies and gather evidence, they desperately try to convince local authorities to intervene before the situation becomes even more dangerous. Meanwhile, Bateman strengthens his control through fear, isolation, and religious manipulation, while one woman inside the group slowly begins to realize the truth behind the prophet she once trusted. Combining undercover investigation, emotional testimonies, and mounting suspense, these episodes create a gripping and deeply unsettling experience.
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 three episodes, the journey deepens into a powerful exploration of culture, survival, and science at the planet’s edges. On a remote Pacific island threatened by rising seas, Will Smith joins Dr. Walworth and John Aini to document a dying language spoken by only five people, turning marine research into an intimate race against time to preserve human memory. The mission reveals how climate change erodes not just coastlines, but identities. The adventure then shifts to extremes of land and ice. In the Kalahari Desert, Will learns survival from the San people, confronting the limits of his endurance during a traditional hunt with guide Kane Motswana. The odyssey culminates beneath the ice of the North Pole, where, alongside polar ecologist Allison Fong, a daring dive to collect critical samples is jeopardized by a sudden storm and equipment failure. What follows is a gripping test of courage and teamwork that redefines heroism at the end of a 100-day quest.
Family members and close friends share untold stories, including former spouses Denise Richards and Brooke Mueller, exposing the personal cost of life in the spotlight. Viewers can watch both episodes together as a single, continuous story, following Sheen’s fall at the height of his hit series and his hard-earned path toward accountability and redemption. It is a raw portrait of fame, addiction, and the possibility of change when the cameras finally stop rolling.