In the final two episodes, Dean Potter’s dream of pushing free solo climbing beyond anything seen before collides with the arrival of Alex Honnold, a younger climber capable of taking the sport into terrifying new territory. As both men circle the impossible challenge of El Capitan, Dean is forced to confront not only a rival, but the fear that his place at the edge of climbing history may be slipping away. What begins as a battle for greatness becomes something far more personal: A struggle with ego, identity, isolation and the dangerous need to keep proving himself when the world is already watching. As Dean’s mental health declines and some of his closest supporters begin to drift away, he takes a risky job in China and seems to move even closer to the edge. But a new relationship gives him a fragile sense of grounding, and his lifelong dream of flight finally comes into focus through the radical world of wingsuit flying. The final chapters become both breathtaking and haunting, following a man who searched for freedom in the air, in the mountains and in the spaces where fear becomes almost spiritual. Intimate, tense and deeply emotional, they reveal the beauty and tragedy of a life lived in pursuit of the impossible.
In episodes 13 and 14, the war reaches a decisive new stage as the Allies prepare to launch Operation Overlord and open the long-awaited second front in Nazi-occupied France. Behind the invasion of Normandy lies an enormous gamble of planning, deception, weather, timing and nerve, with Dwight D. Eisenhower carrying the weight of one of the most dangerous military decisions in history. From the beaches of D-Day to the struggle to break through Hitler’s Atlantic Wall, the episode captures the fear, scale and sacrifice of the operation that begins the liberation of Western Europe. The story then moves to World War II’s often overlooked Asian theater, where Allied forces and Japan fight across jungles, mountains, plains and impossible supply routes. In Burma, India and China, commanders such as Joseph Stilwell, William Slim and Lord Mountbatten face a brutal war of disease, exhaustion, monsoon terrain and relentless Japanese resistance. From the Burma Road and the deadly airlift over the Hump to the fighting at Myitkyina, Imphal and Saipan, these episodes reveal a vast and punishing conflict far from Europe’s headlines, where survival itself becomes a battle and victory demands endurance on a staggering scale.
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.
The strategic battle for Guadalcanal became one of the fiercest air campaigns of the Second World War, where exhausted American pilots flying rugged F4F Wildcat fighters and later the more powerful F4U Corsairs faced relentless Japanese Zero fighters in deadly combat above the Pacific. The documentary recreates intense dogfights between carrier-based aircraft, dive bombers, and torpedo planes as both sides fought desperately for control of the skies and the survival of the island campaign. Through gripping firsthand accounts from the men who survived these missions, the episode captures chaotic aerial battles, emergency landings, and the split-second decisions that transformed young pilots into legendary aces in a single day. Every encounter carried enormous consequences not only for Guadalcanal itself, but for the future balance of power across the Pacific. Combining dramatic combat recreations with real veteran testimonies, the episode delivers a tense and highly immersive portrait of aerial warfare during one of the most decisive campaigns of World War II. From surprise ambushes by agile Mitsubishi Zeros to brutal close-range duels involving Wildcats, Dauntless dive bombers, and torpedo aircraft above jungle-covered islands and burning naval fleets, the documentary places viewers directly inside the fear, adrenaline, and exhaustion experienced by the pilots who fought for Guadalcanal. It becomes an especially compelling experience for anyone fascinated by military aviation, aircraft history, and the savage air battles that shaped the Pacific War.
A documentary that follows Andre Ricciardi after a devastating diagnosis, turning what could be a story of despair into something unexpectedly disarming, honest, and even darkly funny. Confronted with his own mortality—and haunted by the simple decision he didn’t make in time—Andre reflects on his life with brutal self-awareness, calling himself an idiot while refusing to surrender to self-pity. Through candid conversations and intimate moments, the film captures his determination to face the inevitable with curiosity, wit, and a stubborn refusal to look away. What unfolds is far more than a personal story about illness. It becomes a deeply human exploration of regret, responsibility, and the fragile line between tragedy and humor. As Andre navigates his final chapter, his perspective challenges everything we expect from stories about death, offering something rare: a raw, thought-provoking, and unexpectedly uplifting experience that stays with you long after it ends.
A group of volunteer fighter pilots is sent into the skies over China at a time when the balance of air power seems already decided. Facing overwhelming odds, they develop daring tactics, relentless discipline and an almost reckless courage that quickly turns them into a legend. Each mission becomes a high-stakes gamble where survival depends on skill, instinct and the ability to outthink an enemy that appears stronger in every way. Through intense aerial combat and split-second decisions, these pilots transform from outsiders into a decisive force, proving that innovation and determination can shift the course of a war. What unfolds is a gripping story of strategy, risk and adrenaline, where every dogfight pushes the limits of both man and machine, and where the sky itself becomes a battlefield of survival and reputation.
As Dean’s mental health declines and some of his closest supporters begin to drift away, he takes a risky job in China and seems to move even closer to the edge. But a new relationship gives him a fragile sense of grounding, and his lifelong dream of flight finally comes into focus through the radical world of wingsuit flying. The final chapters become both breathtaking and haunting, following a man who searched for freedom in the air, in the mountains and in the spaces where fear becomes almost spiritual. Intimate, tense and deeply emotional, they reveal the beauty and tragedy of a life lived in pursuit of the impossible.