Embedded on the front line, a journalist follows a Ukrainian platoon tasked with an almost impossible objective: crossing 2,000 meters of heavily fortified forest to retake a small but crucial village from Russian control. As the soldiers advance step by step, the camera captures the raw reality of modern warfare—exhaustion, fear, solidarity, and the constant presence of death—turning a military operation into an intimate portrait of those fighting it. As the mission unfolds, the film goes beyond tactics and gunfire to confront the deeper cost of war. The journalist witnesses shattered landscapes, broken bodies, and minds pushed to their limits, while doubts grow about how—and when—the conflict might end. What emerges is a haunting reflection on courage and survival, and on a generation forced to measure hope in meters gained at devastating cost.
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.
In the shadow of the Second World War, entire cities across Britain were plunged into darkness as waves of enemy bombers lit the skies with fire and destruction. Through newly restored archival footage and rare color images, the story unfolds of ordinary men, women, and children enduring nightly raids, shelters, and uncertainty. Survivors’ voices weave a vivid picture of fear, resilience, and solidarity in a nation pushed to the brink. Blending breathtaking visuals with powerful testimonies, this documentary immerses viewers in the heart of the Blitz like never before. It is a journey into the courage and spirit that defined wartime Britain, revealing how a population under siege discovered unity, sacrifice, and hope in the face of devastation.
In the heart of southern France, the Mandrin Cave has drawn archaeologists for over three decades, its soils preserving an extraordinary archive of human life stretching back tens of thousands of years. Within its layers lie traces of fire, tools, and bones that tell the story of survival in a harsh prehistoric world. In 2015, the remarkable discovery of a Neanderthal individual—nicknamed Thorin—revealed that these ancient humans once lived side by side with the first Homo sapiens to arrive in the region. Following an international team of scientists, the investigation uncovers fragile relics of the Palaeolithic era that are rewriting our understanding of how two human species encountered one another. With every excavation, new details emerge about resilience, adaptation, and coexistence, offering a powerful re-examination of what it meant to be human 50,000 years ago. This is not only the story of the Neanderthals’ fate, but also of the deep roots of our own identity.
Embark on an extraordinary journey across our cosmic neighborhood to witness the hidden wonders of planets, moons, and asteroids—each world more astonishing than the last. Cutting-edge imaging and breathtaking visuals unveil the solar system in ways never imagined, revealing alien landscapes, colossal storms, and secrets that challenge everything we know about our place in the universe. In the first episode, you can explore volcanic realms where otherworldly landscapes are sculpted by fire and ice. Discover planets and moons blanketed with enormous volcanoes, some erupting so violently that plumes rise into the darkness of space. From oceans of molten rock to frozen geysers launching towering jets of vapor, these spectacular worlds showcase the raw power and beauty of nature beyond Earth.
Sir David Attenborough returns to the Galápagos Islands and travels throughout the archipelago to explain their origins and their unique fauna in evolutionary terms. He has captured a new species of pink iguana on film for the first time. In the first episode, the islands of the Galapagos rose explosively from the ocean four million years ago. Although life would not seem viable in such a remote Pacific outpost, the first arrivals landed as the fires still burned. David Attenborough explores the islands for the animals and plants that descend from these pioneers: from the sea birds carrying the seeds that made a tentative foothold on these rocks, to equator-dwelling penguins and a dancing bird with blue feet. This is a story of treacherous journeys, life-forms that forged unlikely companionships, and surviving against all odds. It is the story of an evolutionary melting pot in which anything and everything is possible.
As the mission unfolds, the film goes beyond tactics and gunfire to confront the deeper cost of war. The journalist witnesses shattered landscapes, broken bodies, and minds pushed to their limits, while doubts grow about how—and when—the conflict might end. What emerges is a haunting reflection on courage and survival, and on a generation forced to measure hope in meters gained at devastating cost.