France, 17th Century. For more than three decades, a mysterious prisoner was moved from fortress to fortress under extraordinary secrecy, his identity concealed behind a mask and known only to a handful of powerful men. Ordered into confinement by the minister of Louis XIV in 1669, he would remain locked away until his death in 1703 — alive, but erased. Why was he hidden so carefully? What secret was so dangerous that it demanded absolute silence? Drawing on archival research, expert analysis, and the turbulent politics of the Sun King’s reign, this gripping historical investigation revisits one of France’s greatest unsolved enigmas. From theories of royal bloodlines and forbidden romances to diplomatic conspiracies and mistaken identities, the film explores the many faces behind the mask and the fragile power structures of absolutist France. A tale of intrigue, paranoia, and state secrecy that continues to fascinate more than 350 years later.
In a world where convenience rules what lands on our plates, this eye-opening investigation pulls back the curtain on the true cost of our modern food economy. What once promised abundance and innovation has morphed into a system where a few powerful corporations hold the reins, shaping government policy, squeezing farmers, and prioritizing profit over people. The result is a food supply that is astonishingly efficient yet painfully vulnerable — and deeply tied to a global health crisis fueled by ultra-processed products. With incisive reporting and compelling voices from leading food system critics, this urgent follow-up dives deeper into how profit-driven consolidation has rewired what we eat and how it’s made. Through revealing stories from workers, families, and the experts who dared to investigate, it challenges everything we think we know about food, health, and corporate control — and urges viewers to rethink the cost of what ends up on our tables.
When an incurable diagnosis shatters the future they had imagined, two poet lovers choose not to retreat into silence, but to confront the unknown with words, wit, and fierce tenderness. As hospital rooms replace ordinary routines, their shared language becomes both shield and sanctuary, transforming fear into art and vulnerability into connection. What begins as a confrontation with mortality unfolds into a deeply human meditation on love, resilience, and the fragile beauty of being alive. Through intimate conversations, flashes of unexpected humor, and moments of raw honesty, the film captures how creativity can illuminate even the darkest chapters. It is not simply a story about illness, but about how two souls refuse to let a diagnosis define the depth of their bond. Moving, poetic, and quietly life-affirming, this is a portrait of love seen in its truest light—when time feels short, and every moment matters.
In his mid-eighties, when many believed his journey was winding down, David Attenborough embarked on a bold new chapter in natural history filmmaking. This adventure traces the epic story of life on Earth, from the first organisms that flourished on ancient seabeds hundreds of millions of years ago to the astonishing biodiversity of today. Revisiting iconic landscapes and harnessing cutting-edge technology, Attenborough reveals how our planet’s living tapestry was shaped across deep time. The three episodes can be enjoyed together in a single continuous viewing, creating one sweeping journey across continents and oceans. From the Galápagos Islands to the caves of Borneo, from China’s ancient tropics to the Great Barrier Reef, the series follows Attenborough’s global quest to understand how life rose, adapted, and endured. It is a grand exploration of evolution, resilience, and the fragile beauty of the world we inherit.
Click CC for subtitles. In a quiet North Macedonian village, a farmer forms an extraordinary bond with a white stork, a creature deeply rooted in local legend and seasonal ritual. What begins as a simple act of care gradually unfolds into a story where nature, folklore, and everyday life merge. Through patient observation and intimate storytelling, the documentary reveals how ancient beliefs still breathe beneath the surface of modern rural life. As the stork becomes both companion and symbol, the film explores themes of belonging, migration, and the fragile balance between humans and the natural world. Blending myth with reality, it offers a poetic meditation on tradition, resilience, and the invisible threads that tie a community to the rhythms of the land and sky.
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.
Drawing on archival research, expert analysis, and the turbulent politics of the Sun King’s reign, this gripping historical investigation revisits one of France’s greatest unsolved enigmas. From theories of royal bloodlines and forbidden romances to diplomatic conspiracies and mistaken identities, the film explores the many faces behind the mask and the fragile power structures of absolutist France. A tale of intrigue, paranoia, and state secrecy that continues to fascinate more than 350 years later.