In episodes 7 and 8, we see how World War II descends into one of the darkest chapters in human history while the Allies prepare to strike back for the first time on a new front. As Hitler’s power spreads across Europe, Nazi hatred turns persecution into policy, pushing Jewish families from discrimination and public humiliation into ghettos, deportations, mass murder, and the horror that will become known as the Holocaust. The war is no longer only a struggle for territory, armies, and empires; it becomes a confrontation with an ideology built on cruelty, fear, and the destruction of an entire people. The story then shifts to North Africa, where the Western Allies must prove they can fight Germany on land. In Operation Torch, inexperienced American troops and their untested commander, Dwight D. Eisenhower, join British forces in a dangerous gamble against the battle-hardened Afrika Korps and the legendary Erwin Rommel. Across deserts, ports, and unforgiving battlefields, the campaign becomes a harsh lesson in modern war, exposing Allied weaknesses while opening the road toward Europe. These two episodes combine moral catastrophe and military turning point, showing both the depths of Nazi evil and the first difficult steps toward its defeat.
Few performers have turned joy into an art form quite like Martin Short. Through classic clips, candid new interviews and never-before-seen home movies filled with famous friends, this intimate documentary looks back on a career that has moved effortlessly across television, film, theater and live comedy. From his Canadian beginnings and breakthrough years on sketch comedy to unforgettable characters, Hollywood success and his long creative partnership with Steve Martin, it reveals the timing, energy and fearless imagination behind one of entertainment’s most beloved comic performers. But behind the laughter is a deeper and more moving story. As he revisits family, friendship, love, loss and the personal strength that carried him through tragedy, the documentary becomes more than a celebration of a brilliant career; it becomes a portrait of a man who chose humor not as an escape from life, but as a way to embrace it fully. Warm, funny, nostalgic and unexpectedly emotional, it invites viewers to discover the private memories behind the public legend, and the extraordinary heart behind a lifetime of making people laugh.
In episodes 9 and 10 of this series, the war moves from the secrecy of codebreaking rooms to one of the most brutal battlefields in history. Far from the front lines, in the quiet English countryside, a hidden struggle unfolds at Bletchley Park, where brilliant mathematicians, linguists and intelligence officers race to crack Germany’s Enigma code. Every intercepted message could save ships, reveal enemy plans and alter the fate of entire campaigns, turning silence, patience and genius into weapons as powerful as tanks or bombers. The story then shifts to the Eastern Front, where Hitler launches Operation Blue in a desperate drive toward the Soviet oil fields and the city of Stalingrad. What begins as a strategic offensive becomes a nightmare of street-by-street combat, starvation, freezing conditions and unimaginable sacrifice. As German forces are pulled deeper into the ruins and Soviet resistance hardens, Stalingrad becomes more than a battle for a city; it becomes a turning point in World War II, where ambition, endurance and catastrophe collide on a scale that changed the course of the war.
This intimate documentary explores Rafael Nadal’s extraordinary tennis career from the inside, revealing not only the champion who conquered the sport, but the man behind the intensity, discipline and sacrifice. Through unseen archives, family moments, behind-the-scenes access and personal reflections, it follows his rise from Mallorca to global legend, his battles with pain and injury, and his difficult journey back to competitive play in 2024 after a devastating 2023. More than a record of victories, it is a powerful portrait of resilience, legacy and the emotional cost of greatness. In the first two episodes, the story begins with an emotional Nadal preparing to announce his retirement to the world, while looking back at the Davis Cup final that launched his career two decades earlier. As he chases one final triumph, his body becomes both his greatest obstacle and the reminder of everything he has given to the game. The series then returns to the early years of his rivalry with Roger Federer, when one unforgettable match ignites one of the greatest duels in tennis history, setting the stage for a story of ambition, respect, suffering and glory.
In episodes 11 and 12, the Allies try to turn victory in North Africa into a direct road toward Nazi Germany, only to discover that Italy will be anything but the “soft underbelly” Winston Churchill imagined. From Sicily to Salerno, Anzio, Monte Cassino and the long road to Rome, the campaign becomes a grinding test of endurance, strategy and sacrifice. What was hoped to be a swift breakthrough into the heart of Hitler’s Reich turns into months of mud, mountains, shattered towns and devastating losses, revealing the brutal cost of forcing open a new front in Europe. The story then rises into the skies, where another deadly battle is being fought above the continent. Allied bomber crews fly from England into the heart of Nazi-occupied Europe, facing freezing altitude, flak, fear and the lethal power of the German Luftwaffe. As B-17s, fighter escorts and air commanders struggle to win control of the air, every mission becomes a gamble between destruction and survival. Together, these episodes show a war closing in on Germany from the ground and from the sky, where courage, technology and human endurance collide on a terrifying scale.
In the final two episodes, Novak Djokovic’s sudden rise changes everything, forcing Rafael Nadal into a new and even more demanding era: the age of the Big Three. What was once a rivalry defined by Roger Federer becomes a three-way battle for history, greatness and survival at the top of tennis. As Djokovic grows stronger and the pressure intensifies, Rafa is pushed to the limits of his body and mind, fighting through pain, doubt and exhaustion while trying to protect the place he has earned through years of sacrifice. But these episodes are not only about trophies, rankings or legendary matches. They reveal the deepest part of Nadal’s character: the refusal to surrender, even when injuries, age and time begin to close in. From the physical punishment of his greatest victories to the emotional weight of knowing that the end is coming, Rafa keeps searching for one more comeback, one more fight, one more reason to believe. Powerful, intimate and deeply moving, the final chapters become a portrait of a champion who built his legend not simply by winning, but by never giving up.
The story then shifts to North Africa, where the Western Allies must prove they can fight Germany on land. In Operation Torch, inexperienced American troops and their untested commander, Dwight D. Eisenhower, join British forces in a dangerous gamble against the battle-hardened Afrika Korps and the legendary Erwin Rommel. Across deserts, ports, and unforgiving battlefields, the campaign becomes a harsh lesson in modern war, exposing Allied weaknesses while opening the road toward Europe. These two episodes combine moral catastrophe and military turning point, showing both the depths of Nazi evil and the first difficult steps toward its defeat.