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1-12 of 12
- Spanning C.S. Lewis' bitter childhood, WWI and his life-changing friendships at Oxford, The Most Reluctant Convert depicts the events that shaped Lewis' early life and journey from hard-boiled atheism to prolific Christianity.
- John Rhys-Davies leads us back into a darker time to discover this tale of saints and sinners, power and passion. The greatest translation of the Bible emerged into a world and culture that would never be quite the same again.
- From PBS - Best known for the groundbreaking portrait of his mother, James McNeill Whistler was the original art star. But beneath the high gloss, the struggle of this genius to find his own voice resulted in a breakaway style that moved painting towards abstraction and would revolutionize the art world in his time-and beyond.
- Documentary examining claims that CS Lewis's Narnia Chronicles contain a hidden meaning. CS Lewis wrote the Narnia Chronicles over 50 years ago, yet they are more popular today than ever. When they were first published, many critics thought them little more than childish scribblings, replete with random characters and unexplained events. Even Lewis's good friend JRR Tolkien thought them confused and misconceived. Other scholars were sure there was something more, something hidden beneath the stories. Although many tried, none could find this secret key of Narnia - until now. Dr Michael Ward, a young academic and expert in all things Lewisian, claims he has found the answer at last: he has discovered the Narnia Code. Using dramatisations of Lewis's early life and career, the programme travels the world, from the Mid-West of modern America to the battlefields of the First World War, meeting experts, testing evidence and uncovering surprising questions and ideas that still challenge readers today.
- It is a feature-length documentary is an unflinching investigation into a little-known treatment for substance abuse that could change the future of addiction forever. A treatment called N.E.T. (Neuro Electric Therapy) claims to take people off their drug of choice within 7 days, with no cold turkey and no future cravings. Invented by Scottish surgeon, Meg Patterson (MBE), 45 years ago, N.E.T. is not a tablet, and it's not expensive. So why has it been shunned by the medical establishment for the past 45 years? This compelling film follows five chronic substance abusers as they trial the treatment in Kentucky, USA. The results are remarkable. - Here we are 18 months on from the original Trial, and all of the participants who completed the treatment are still substance-free. As the world continues to reel from COVID19, this story offers real hope to those suffering from the other long-term overwhelming plague addiction.
- Charlie's Army follows Charlie Allan and his band of beardy, battle-re-enactment, fort-building bikers who've started their very own 21st Century Scottish clan.
- Free money anyone? With no lawyers, no collateral and no credit rating, the Grameen loan and banking system can seem more fantasy than fact, and yet its unparalleled success in many developing countries around the world is beyond dispute. Now, in the depths of one of the worst financial crashes in decades, this Bangladeshi banking phenomenon is coming to Glasgow. Run entirely for the benefit of its customers and with executives that neither own shares nor earn bonuses, this new gospel of financial independence claims to bank the unbankable and offer real hope to the needy. But can a third world idea from Bangladesh really work in the tough schemes and rigid welfare rules of modern day Scotland? Sally Magnusson investigates.