In episodes 5 and 6, you can see how two everyday foods open the door to something far bigger: Memory, survival, tradition and the uneasy bond between humans and the natural world. One journey takes you to La Alberca, in Spain, where the pig is not just an animal but part of a living ritual charged with history, pride and contradiction. The other leads into the rice fields of Kerala, India, where every grain carries the weight of climate, heritage and the fight to preserve ways of life that are slipping away. These chapters do far more than show food on a plate: they reveal beauty, tension and the hidden forces that sustain entire cultures, making each scene feel rich, intimate and impossible to forget.
During 1959-1961 both the Americans and Soviets are planning manned space flight, and we see both sides preparing to do so with the development of the Vostok programme (Russia) and Project Mercury (USA). After difficulties and failures on both sides, the Soviets succeed in putting Yuri Gagarin into space first, with the Americans putting Alan Shepard up shortly afterwards.
Garry Kasparov is arguably the greatest chess player who has ever lived. In 1997 he played a chess match against IBM's computer Deep Blue. Kasparov lost the match. This film shows the match and the events surrounding it from Kasparov's perspective. It delves into the psychological aspects of the game, paranoia surrounding it and suspicions that have arisen around IBM's true tactics. It consists of interviews with Kasparov, his manager, chess experts, and members of the IBM Deep Blue team, as well as original footage of the match itself.
These chapters do far more than show food on a plate: they reveal beauty, tension and the hidden forces that sustain entire cultures, making each scene feel rich, intimate and impossible to forget.