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.
A joyful and revealing portrait celebrates the life and legacy of Mel Brooks, tracing his journey from the early days of television comedy to global superstardom as one of Hollywood’s boldest satirists. Through rare footage, candid reflections, and stories of friendship and love, the film shows how Brooks used laughter to confront fear, failure, and the absurdities of the human condition, transforming personal experience into timeless comedy. Spanning two episodes that can be enjoyed together as a single, continuous film, the documentary follows Brooks as his career takes flight, shaped by deep creative partnerships, his Jewish heritage, and an unshakable drive to push boundaries. It is a warm, hilarious, and deeply human portrait of an artist who, for nearly a century, has turned humor into resilience, connection, and joy.
In the final two episodes, the experiment moves from theory to real life as the twins are forced to take full control of their food choices after moving out on their own. Cooking becomes a daily challenge, exposing how habits, convenience, and culture shape what we eat. At the same time, innovators pushing plant-based alternatives step into the spotlight, as growing concerns around animal products raise urgent questions about health and sustainability. As the study reaches its conclusion, the results are finally revealed. Detailed analyses of weight, gut health, and brain function confront the twins with clear, and sometimes surprising, consequences of their diets. What began as a personal test widens into a broader reflection on the future of food, as momentum builds around a changing food industry and the choices that may redefine how we eat.
In the final three episodes, life in this Zambian stronghold reaches a decisive turning point as survival becomes more fragile than ever. An injured wild dog named Flint defies the odds by helping care for Storm’s largest litter of pups, while leopard Mutima continues her perilous search for a territory to call home. At the same time, the lions face pressures beyond their control, forcing shifts in dominance as age, injury, and the land itself begin to reshape the balance of power. The closing chapter deepens the drama and the emotion. Leopard Olimba struggles with the weight of old age, the wild dogs’ story takes an unexpected turn, and both lions and hyenas experience a baby boom that raises a final question: who truly rules this kingdom now? The series concludes by revealing the unseen human effort behind the scenes, introducing the filmmakers, conservationists, and anti-poaching teams whose extraordinary work protects South Luangwa and the fragile lives that depend on it.
In the final two episodes, the story enters its darkest chapter as Sean Combs faces the consequences of a life lived at the center of power and controversy. After the death of The Notorious B.I.G., his influence and wealth surge, but so do reports of violence and instability surrounding his world, exposing a widening gap between public triumph and private turmoil. As multiple accusers come forward with disturbing allegations of abuse, the narrative shifts from rumor to reckoning. Their testimonies ignite a federal investigation that culminates in a 2024 arrest and a high-profile trial, forcing a confrontation with questions of accountability, silence, and the cost of celebrity. What emerges is a tense, unflinching examination of how fame can shield wrongdoing—and how that shield can finally crack.
In 1949, as illness tightens its grip, George Orwell races to finish the novel that will define the modern age. This documentary traces his final months and the fierce clarity with which he distilled a lifetime of experience into a single warning about power, truth, and freedom. Drawing on letters, archives, and rare testimony, it reveals the personal cost behind the creation of the novel 1984 and the urgency that drove him to the end. The film then unpacks the ideas that erupted from that last act of vision—doublethink, Thoughtcrime, Newspeak, and the ever-watchful presence of Big Brother—showing how Orwell’s insights were born and why they matter more than ever. By connecting the writer’s life to today’s information wars and political realities, it becomes a gripping meditation on how fragile truth can be, and how easily 2+2 can be made to equal five.
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.