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.
After seven years of sobriety, Charlie Sheen looks back with striking honesty on a life lived at full speed. This documentary traces his meteoric rise from rebellious ’80s heart-throb to global TV superstardom, and the excesses that fueled his fame before leading to a very public collapse. Through candid conversations and rare reflections, the film reveals the magnetic charm, chaos, and contradictions that defined an era of celebrity culture. Family members and close friends share untold stories, including former spouses Denise Richards and Brooke Mueller, exposing the personal cost of life in the spotlight. Viewers can watch both episodes together as a single, continuous story, following Sheen’s fall at the height of his hit series and his hard-earned path toward accountability and redemption. It is a raw portrait of fame, addiction, and the possibility of change when the cameras finally stop rolling.
Embedded on the front line, a journalist follows a Ukrainian platoon tasked with an almost impossible objective: crossing 2,000 meters of heavily fortified forest to retake a small but crucial village from Russian control. As the soldiers advance step by step, the camera captures the raw reality of modern warfare—exhaustion, fear, solidarity, and the constant presence of death—turning a military operation into an intimate portrait of those fighting it. As the mission unfolds, the film goes beyond tactics and gunfire to confront the deeper cost of war. The journalist witnesses shattered landscapes, broken bodies, and minds pushed to their limits, while doubts grow about how—and when—the conflict might end. What emerges is a haunting reflection on courage and survival, and on a generation forced to measure hope in meters gained at devastating cost.
Guided by Kevin Costner, this documentary invites viewers into the sacred origins of Christmas, retelling the birth of Jesus as a human journey marked by faith, hardship, and hope. Through evocative storytelling and historical insight, it traces the fragile path taken by Mary and Joseph as they confront uncertainty, danger, and destiny, revealing the quiet courage behind a story known across centuries. Blending scripture, archaeology, and reflective narration, the film brings the ancient world to life while uncovering the spiritual meaning at the heart of the Nativity. More than a retelling, it offers a contemplative experience that reconnects the season with its deepest purpose, inviting audiences to rediscover Christmas as a story of humility, perseverance, and enduring belief.
Experience a wondrous adventure from the dinosaur age. Join Julie, an imaginative young woman, as she travels from a modern-day aquarium to the Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous periods. Explore an amazing underwater universe inhabited by larger-than-life creatures including the powerful Liopleurodon, long-necked Elasmosaurus and gigantic Shonisaurus which were ruling the seas before dinosaurs conquered the earth. Thanks to state-of-the-art ultra-photorealistic imagery in 3D or 2D, see science come alive in a unique and entertaining manner. Immerse yourself in a lost age, 200 million years back in time, and get ready for a face-to-face encounter with the T-Rex of the seas. Directed by Ronan Chapalain and Pascal Vuong.
In this ground-breaking film, Sir David Attenborough takes us on a journey through the world-famous Natural History Museum in London in a captivating tale of discovery, adventure, and magic, where state-of-the-art CGI, science, and research combine to bring the museum's now long-extinct inhabitants to life to discover how these animals once roamed the planet. As the doors are locked and night falls, Attenborough stays behind and meets some of the most fascinating extinct creatures which come alive in front of his eyes; dinosaurs, ice age beasts, and giant reptiles. The film fulfils a lifelong dream of him, who said: 'I have been coming to the Natural History Museum since I was a boy. It's one of the great places to come to learn about natural history. In this film we have the technology to bring back to life some of the most romantic and extraordinary extinct creatures that can be conceived; some are relatively recent animals like the dodo, others older like the dinosaurs, and some we only know through fossil evidence. Using our current scientific knowledge, this film brings these creatures alive, allowing me to look at some of the biggest questions surrounding them.'
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.