This gripping five-part docuseries marks the 50th anniversary of the fall of Saigon, revealing how a distant war redefined two nations. With unseen footage, candid interviews, and damning presidential recordings, it exposes the political manipulation, battlefield tragedies, and societal fractures that shaped the Vietnam War. From Washington’s strategic missteps to the raw trauma of those on the ground, it shows how the conflict shattered trust in government and left wounds that still resonate today. The first three episodes trace the war’s slow ignition and its rapid spiral into chaos. They take viewers deep into the secretive early stages of the U.S. military buildup, then shift to the complex realities inside Vietnam, with personal accounts from soldiers on both sides. The series then confronts the shock of the Tet Offensive and the atrocities of Mỹ Lai, dismantling the illusion of a winnable war. These opening chapters set a powerful tone—intimate, harrowing, and unflinchingly honest.
A record-breaking concert phenomenon comes alive through the eyes of Taylor Swift, blending electrifying performances with rare backstage access and intimate reflections from her closest collaborators. The film captures the scale, ambition, and emotional pulse of a tour that redefined modern live music, revealing the artistry, logistics, and personal moments behind a global cultural event. In the first three episodes, viewers witness the tour’s genesis and evolution: rehearsals take shape as preparations intensify for a landmark run at Wembley Stadium; a two-month break becomes a creative pivot to refresh the show and introduce The Tortured Poets Department; and as the tour returns to the U.S., Taylor looks back on her journey while planting the seeds for new surprises that keep each night feeling singular.
This documentary delivers a penetrating examination of Sean Combs, charting his rise from visionary hitmaker to one of the most powerful figures in hip-hop, and the growing controversies that now surround his legacy. Through archival footage, insider testimony, and investigative reporting, it exposes both the revolutionary impact of Bad Boy Entertainment and the darker allegations that have cast a long shadow over his empire, raising urgent questions about power, accountability, and image in the music industry. In the first two episodes, viewers see how a driven kid from New York reinvented himself as Puff Daddy, building Bad Boy Records into a cultural force. As fame and wealth accelerate, the series explores how the embrace of celebrity ignites a dangerous rivalry with Death Row Records, setting the stage for an era defined by excess, conflict, and unresolved questions. The lingering mystery surrounding the shooting of Tupac Shakur looms large, framing a story where ambition, rivalry, and consequence collide.
The first three episodes trace the war’s slow ignition and its rapid spiral into chaos. They take viewers deep into the secretive early stages of the U.S. military buildup, then shift to the complex realities inside Vietnam, with personal accounts from soldiers on both sides. The series then confronts the shock of the Tet Offensive and the atrocities of Mỹ Lai, dismantling the illusion of a winnable war. These opening chapters set a powerful tone—intimate, harrowing, and unflinchingly honest.