In the shadows of American cities, far from the promises of prosperity and comfort, countless forgotten lives struggle to survive day after day. This deeply human documentary travels through streets, shelters, abandoned corners, and invisible communities where homelessness has become a harsh and permanent reality for many U.S. citizens. Through intimate encounters and raw testimonies, the film reveals the emotional wounds, broken dreams, addiction, loneliness, and resilience hidden behind faces most people pass without noticing. Accompanied by the haunting and unmistakable voice of Tom Waits, the documentary creates an atmosphere that is both poetic and devastating, transforming this journey into an unforgettable experience filled with humanity, sorrow, dignity, and reflection. More than a portrait of homelessness, it becomes a powerful exploration of abandonment, survival, and the fragile line separating ordinary life from complete social exclusion.
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.
Fifteen years after becoming a global sensation as the tallest man on Earth, Sultan Kosen returns in a deeply personal and emotionally charged documentary that reveals the hidden cost of living inside a body that never stopped growing. Standing over 2.51 metres tall, Sultan became famous across the world, but behind the records and media attention was a painful battle against a rare medical condition that threatened both his mobility and his life. Now, as worsening health problems force him to rely increasingly on wheelchairs, he travels to London for critical medical evaluations that could determine whether his body can still be saved. At the same time, another life-changing moment approaches: Guinness World Records must officially measure him once again to decide whether he still holds the title that shaped his entire identity. But beyond the fame, the documentary reveals a far more intimate story — his failed marriage, his loneliness, and his continuing hope of finding love and building a family. Combining emotional honesty, medical suspense, and the extraordinary reality of a man unlike any other, the film builds toward a gripping conclusion that could change Sultan’s future forever.
In the final three episodes of the series, the image of elite discipline surrounding the SS is stripped away to reveal a far darker and more disturbing reality. Behind the façade of military excellence lay poorly trained recruits driven not by honor, but by blind ideology and a complete absence of remorse. As their role expands from the battlefield to the brutal control of concentration camps, the narrative exposes how ordinary men became perpetrators of systematic violence, carrying out atrocities with chilling efficiency while maintaining the appearance of normal lives beyond their crimes. These episodes push further into the unsettling contrast between barbarity and everyday existence, showing how members of the SS could participate in unimaginable acts and then return to social settings as if nothing had happened. The story then draws a direct line to the present, confronting the uncomfortable truth that, despite overwhelming historical evidence, remnants of admiration and myth still persist in certain circles. It’s a gripping and unsettling conclusion that forces viewers to question how such distortion of memory can endure—and why it still matters today.
In the final two episodes, you’ll witness the most decisive moments of the journey as relationships move closer to real outcomes. Connor takes further steps with growing confidence, while James continues searching for a meaningful connection, balancing hope with moments of doubt. Madison faces more personal and emotional situations, opening up even more as she explores what she truly wants in a relationship. At the same time, the newer participants push themselves into more challenging situations. Logan continues stepping outside his comfort zone in pursuit of a genuine bond, Emma navigates deeper emotional highs and lows, and Dylan shows clear progress as he gains confidence with each experience. These episodes focus on honest decisions, emotional growth, and the reality of finding love, delivering moments that feel authentic, intense, and highly engaging.
A young filmmaker leaves behind his civilian life to enter the front lines of Ukraine’s war, documenting not only the battlefield but the emotional weight of a conflict that reshapes everything it touches. Through his camera, moments of tension, fear and humanity unfold with an immediacy that places you inside a reality few ever witness firsthand. Beyond the combat, the film reveals the inner transformation of a man confronting duty, identity and survival, offering a raw and intimate perspective that turns a distant war into something deeply personal and impossible to ignore.
Accompanied by the haunting and unmistakable voice of Tom Waits, the documentary creates an atmosphere that is both poetic and devastating, transforming this journey into an unforgettable experience filled with humanity, sorrow, dignity, and reflection. More than a portrait of homelessness, it becomes a powerful exploration of abandonment, survival, and the fragile line separating ordinary life from complete social exclusion.