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.
In the final two episodes, the focus shifts to forests and humanity’s defining role in the planet’s future. Ancient woodlands emerge as powerful engines of climate balance, storing vast amounts of carbon while sustaining intricate webs of life. Through striking visuals and frontline science, the documentary reveals how the health of the world’s forests is inseparable from the stability of Earth’s climate—and how their decline accelerates global risk. The story then turns inward, asking what responsibility humans bear in shaping what comes next. From indigenous stewardship to bold restoration projects, these episodes explore how human choices can either deepen the crisis or unlock nature’s capacity to heal. It’s a compelling conclusion that reframes our relationship with the natural world, showing that the future of nature is, ultimately, the future of humanity itself.
For decades, one investigative journalist has forced the most powerful institutions in the United States to confront uncomfortable truths. This documentary follows Seymour Hersh as he reflects on a career spent exposing constitutional abuses, secret wars, and government cover-ups that reshaped public trust. Through archival reporting and personal insight, the film traces how his groundbreaking work challenged official narratives and altered the course of political journalism. As the story unfolds, it reveals the methods, risks, and consequences of telling truths others want buried. From explosive scoops to fierce backlash, the documentary examines the price of accountability in a system built on secrecy, offering a gripping portrait of journalism as a last line of defense for democracy.
An explosive investigation brings together 34 senior figures from the U.S. government, military, and intelligence community who claim the world has been kept in the dark for decades. Through firsthand testimony and insider access, the documentary examines allegations of an 80-year cover-up surrounding the existence of non-human intelligent life, and the hidden efforts to conceal encounters, evidence, and recovered technology. What emerges is a portrait of secrecy at the highest levels of power, challenging everything we think we know about our place in the universe. As the story unfolds, the focus shifts to a clandestine global race, where major nations are locked in a secret struggle to reverse-engineer technology of non-human origin. Beyond the shock of the revelations, the film explores the profound consequences disclosure could have for humanity’s future, while offering rare behind-the-scenes access to those leading a bipartisan push to bring the truth into the open. It is a gripping look at secrecy, power, and a reality that may be far bigger than we ever imagined.
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.
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.