This powerful documentary examines the origins, ideology and evolution of one of the most feared organizations of Nazi Germany. It explores how the SS (Schutzstaffel) transformed from a small protective unit into a vast and ruthless machine that played a central role in the Holocaust. Through detailed analysis and historical evidence, it reveals the distorted beliefs, calculated strategies and systematic brutality that defined its actions, offering a chilling insight into how ordinary structures were turned into instruments of terror on an unprecedented scale. In the first three episodes, the focus turns to the rise of the SS and the individuals who helped shape its power. It traces how recruits were selected and why the organization appealed to certain men, uncovering the mindset behind their commitment. The story delves into the figure of Heinrich Himmler, an unlikely leader whose vision and ambition drove the expansion of the SS, as well as Reinhard Heydrich, whose cold and methodical approach made him one of the key architects of the Holocaust. Together, these episodes reveal how leadership, ideology and personal ambition combined to fuel one of history’s darkest forces.
Five centuries after his death, the mystery of an extraordinary mind still captivates the world. Through a fascinating journey into the Renaissance, this documentary explores how one man could redefine art, science and human knowledge all at once. Guided by expert insights and historical investigation, it retraces the life of Leonardo da Vinci, uncovering the genius behind masterpieces, inventions and discoveries that were centuries ahead of their time. From the delicate brushstrokes of the Mona Lisa to groundbreaking anatomical studies and visionary machines, the film reveals the unrelenting curiosity that drove him to explore everything around him. Blending history, art and science, it offers a compelling portrait of a man who saw no boundaries between disciplines — and whose legacy continues to shape the modern world.
From an early age, a Hungarian prodigy named Judit Polgar was raised to believe that genius could be trained — and that she would prove it to the world. Guided by an ambitious father who rejected convention and educated his daughters at home through relentless chess training, she entered a battlefield long dominated by men. What followed was a 15-year journey of discipline, pressure, and defiance, as she refused to compete in women-only tournaments and instead took on the strongest grandmasters on earth. Facing the towering presence of world champion Garry Kasparov and the weight of global skepticism, she shattered barriers move by move, redefining what was thought possible for women in elite competition. This inspiring documentary reveals not only the brilliance of her mind, but the emotional cost of greatness — a story of talent, ambition, control, and liberation played out across the 64 squares of the chessboard.
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.
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.
Physicist Jim Al-Khalili embarks on an extraordinary quest through 600 million years of evolution to reveal how the human brain — the most complex structure known in the universe — came to exist. With more than 100 billion neurons and 100 trillion connections, it surpasses even the stars of the Milky Way. Through breathtaking science and striking visuals, this documentary uncovers how nature transformed simple nerve cells into the ultimate thinking machine. From the first survival instincts of primates to the dawn of social intelligence, Jim explores how cooperation, relationships and empathy reshaped the brain and made us who we are. Working alongside his wife and leading researchers, he dives into fossil evidence, brain scans and the rise of artificial intelligence to answer one profound question: what makes the biological brain so unique — and can anything ever match it?
In the first three episodes, the focus turns to the rise of the SS and the individuals who helped shape its power. It traces how recruits were selected and why the organization appealed to certain men, uncovering the mindset behind their commitment. The story delves into the figure of Heinrich Himmler, an unlikely leader whose vision and ambition drove the expansion of the SS, as well as Reinhard Heydrich, whose cold and methodical approach made him one of the key architects of the Holocaust. Together, these episodes reveal how leadership, ideology and personal ambition combined to fuel one of history’s darkest forces.