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- From the dealer to the narcotics officer, the inmate to the federal judge, a penetrating look inside America's criminal justice system, revealing the profound human rights implications of U.S. drug policy.
- In the summer of 2004, audiences looked on in disbelief as the Greek National Football Team, a country that had never previously won a single match in a major tournament, took down the giants of world football to become the unlikeliest of European Champions. The architect behind this unprecedented triumph was legendary German football coach 'King' Otto Rehhagel. After accomplishing every major success in Germany, he made the bold decision to leave all he knew behind and work in a foreign country with the underachieving Greek National Team. This is the story of how these two contrasting cultures came together to speak the same language and write a new chapter of Greek mythology.
- They are Moscow's stray shadows: a "pack" of dogs and humans, claiming their territory where the city is crumbling and yet reveals a magical landscape.
- Look at 40 years of war through the eyes of those who suffer most from it - the women of Afghanistan. The documentary begins in the 1960s, when peace reigns in the Kingdom of Afghanistan. When the communists take power, an endless war begins that changes the face of Afghanistan. Women become pawns in ideological battles. After September 11, 2001, Afghan women hope for the return of peace. They want to take their fate into their own hands, but the spiral of violence continues to this day.
- After 62 years of marriage, an elderly couple decides to get a divorce.
- The story of an Iraqi child whose family abandoned Mosul after the Islamic State took control of it in 2014, and war broke out in their area. The family lived in a displaced person camp. The child was forced to move away from his family and work in Erbil to be able to support his family. The child works daily for eight hours and earn less than five dollars a day. Because of that, he also stopped studying. The film shows the suffering of refugee and displaced children after the wars.
- "The wind got up in the night and took our plans away," reads the proverb in the opening titles of Museum of the Revolution. The words are a reference to the 1961 plan to build a grand museum in Belgrade as a tribute to Socialist Yugoslavia. It was supposed to "safeguard the truth" about the Yugoslav people. But the plan never got beyond the construction of the basement. The derelict building now tells a very different story from the one envisioned by the initiators 60 years ago. In the damp, pitch-dark building live the outcasts of a society reshaped by capitalism. The film focuses on a girl who earns a little cash on the street by cleaning car windows with her mother. The girl has a close friendship with an old woman who also lives in the basement. Against the background of a transforming city, the three women find refuge in each other.
- The New Greatness Case offers remarkable access to a group of young Russians entrapped by the secret service, resulting in unjust trials and prison sentences - echoing the intensified crackdown on dissent and free expression in Russia we see on the news every day. As we are witnessing the intensified crackdown on dissent and free expression in Russia, The New Greatness Case brings you into the life of young Russians caught in the crossfire. Anya was an ordinary teenager, discussing Russian politics and social issues on the internet with a group of friends, when a secret agent joined their chat group and rented them a meeting space - pushing them towards direct physical action. Police storm their homes to arrest and jail the teens, accusing them of plotting to overthrow the government and fabricating charges of extremism. Three years later, Anya's mother, continuing her desperate fight to prove her daughter's innocence, has transformed from a loyal follower of Vladimir Putin to a hunger-strike enacting political activist. With hidden camera footage, and an intimate relationship with the protagonists, director Anna Shishova shows the complete repression of present-day Russia, and how young, free-thinking people, are seen as a threat to the government.
- Jabir, Usama and Useir are three young Bosnian brothers, born into a family of shepherds. They grew up in the shadow of their father, Ibrahim, a strict, radical Islamist preacher. When Ibrahim gets sentenced to two years in prison, for war participation and terrorism, the three brothers are suddenly left on their own.
- Three generations of an Iranian family, from the 1979 Islamic Revolution to today.
- Mubiru Reagan's life depends on a football scholarship. His dream is to emulate his idol, Fernando Torres, and be able to score a goal that will take his country, Uganda, to their first African Nations Cup. But above all he wants to study.
- A 10-year-old boy for more than a year as he confronted a decision which potentially would have a huge impact not just for his own future but for that of his island.
- Mustafa and his association decide to establish a project that changes entirely the social and economic situation of the mental disabled people in his city.
- On a road trip, Ahmed a train conductor is torn between his loyalty to the old Tunisian railway company and his personal aspirations, while Fitati, his colleague, chooses to become a whistleblower on train accidents.
- Is it possible for people to view different "realities"?
- Unemployed youths are swelling the ranks of gangs sowing violence in Zinder, Niger. Aicha Macky explores the origins of the radicalization in her hometown and the prospects for escaping it.
- A young Himalayan boy Veeru withstands prejudice from his village for his Indian-Nepalese background. Though rejected for his mixed identity, Veeru resiliently confronts the frequent indifference.
- 60 years of the History of Lebanon seen throughout the story of the Mercedes Ponton (the 180 model) and its German-Lebanese "family" locally called "Marcedes". Marcedes: the story of a car, the story of a family, the story of a country.
- Once a successful Syrian actor, Jihad Abdo is now struggling as a refugee while trying to reinvent his life and rebuild his career.
- Invalids devastated by war in the Democratic Republic of the Congo make the trek to the capital to make their voices heard, to demand dignity and some kind of compensation.
- An exploration into the motives and histories of individuals who have exited the world of violent extremism. This includes the director herself.
- Biography of famous football player Dragan Dzajic
- They are women who chose the profession of teaching out of love and willingness - But circumstances put them in villages, mountains, and deserts .. far from their usual places, parents, and the luxury of life.
- Ali, preacher of the village mosque, is leading an unusual project: the reopening and renovation of the cinema in his neighborhood, which has been closed for a quarter of a century.
- 25 years after the siege of Sarajevo, the Spanish war reporter Gervasio Sánchez returns to the scene. There he meets the adults he photographed as a child, having chosen to capture life rather than death and destruction on film. What memories do these survivors have of this period as children? How did this incomprehensible and absurd war change their lives? What scars did it leave on them forever?
- China's Forgotten Daughters tells an intimate story of one woman's journey that questions traditional notions of family and identity, revealing the wounds that tear at the heart of Chinese society in the aftermath of the one-child policy.
- A spiritual journey mixed with adventure and thrill that Ammo took searching for his friend Said, who does neither use the phone nor modern means of communication, and who lives in a village in the depths of the rocky desert in the southeast of Morocco. This journey in which he experienced different situations that helped him free himself from the shackles of the material life, which scattered his being.
- The film is an analytical and critical approach of the state of movie-making in Morocco since its start to the present day.
- This is the story of a Greek physician who collects pendants and bracelets. This is the story of an Italian woman who has been fighting for 15 years to «make bodies talk.» This is the story of those who watch over the forgotten migrants.
- After a fifteen-year absence, Farah returns to Lebanon to live with her ageing father. There, the two try to find a common language that will allow them to have one last conversation.
- This film retraces the lives of a group of diehard football fans that have given everything they have for the love of the game so much so that they have become a social phenomena known by fans across the board.
- Ramadan month diaries and traditions in the small desert Berber region of Mzab Valley , southern Algeria . The film also demonstrates the history of Mozabit Berbers , their social system , traditions , values and religious life .
- A film about the sustainability team of the biggest Nordic bank, and the challenges of being part of a system in dire need of reform.
- Accomplishing the extraordinary in the face of serious illness. Little Stars tells the surprisingly life-affirming stories of young people living with life-limiting illnesses. Against the odds these youngsters are making the most of every moment thanks to the support of their loved ones, working in harmony with passionate 'palliative care' teams. Regrettably, not all conditions can be cured. However, many children with life-limiting conditions will live for years, if not decades. Currently, 20 million children can benefit from palliative care, but access remains an issue. But for those who are receiving care, the results are incredible. These remarkable stories show young people finding hope, love, joy and attainment in the face of the inevitable.
- The Moroccan futurist who has a global belonging to humanitarian issues, El Mehdi Elmanjra, who made a lot of future predictions in the past, and now they come true.
- The journey of the late director Mohammed Khan over the past 28 years through the eyes of his pupil Ahmed Rashwan, through the director's personal archive, and the stations that brought them together.
- Khodor (13) a child whose family tries to issue him an ID document that proves his existence and gives him the right to education, healthcare and movement outside of the Palestinian refugee camp of Shatila in Beirut, Lebanon. Throughout the process, many of the family old secrets get revealed.
- Rachel is a HIV-positive mother whose goal it is to educate pregnant women in Burkina Faso so that they will not pass on the virus to their children. Her activities take place around the clinics of Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, where she found the help of Agnes, a nurse who teaches pregnant women the protocol of HIV prevention. One of the main obstacles in Rachel's journey is to overcome the problem of social exclusion for these HIV-positive women. In this culture, the HIV question is considered by many to be a woman's problem. They need to make sure that their babies will not be infected, but by doing the HIV test they worry that their community will learn about their illness and eventually ostracize them. Rachel realizes that raising awareness in the clinics of the capital is no longer enough. She has to extend her fight to the remote area in the outskirts of Ouagadougou where the level of education is much lower and therefore the women face a higher level of discrimination.
- Three Moroccan horsewomen are looking among mountain villages for girls who are passionate of horse riding. So can they make the first female cavalry team in Morocco.
- A first-hand look at the Fellagha, Tunisia's armed fighters who fought the French until independence in 1956.
- A film about senior citizens learning about computers from teenage mentors and the connections made both on and offline.
- An auteur's personal narrative interwoven with those of other Syrian characters highlighting years of silence, fear and terror. A representation of stories which were behind the eruption of the Syrian society and the start of its revolution.
- What is beauty? Tall, short, fat or skinny, green eyes, blue eyes, or black? What about skin colour? What do we care about the most: beauty of the face, or the body? What makes a human beautiful? Fashion? Perfume? Make-up? When I began my journey, I didn't know where to start. Where do you begin to look for beauty, among so many different people with different tastes; different societies influenced by nature and climate and by countless cultures and religions? These days ideals of beauty surround us. Images of beauty in cinema, Television, fashion magazines, , fashion shows, and beauty contests. We are told which makeup that best suits our faces, the clothes that best suit our bodies, how to achieve the perfect figure, even the food that will make your face brighter. I believe that the best way to define the human beauty is to speak with those who have been searching for beauty throughout history, who have explored the faces of women and have been moved to pay tribute to it though art.
- Mohamed Abed Al-Jabri, the Moroccan thinker whose thinking extended to all Arab countries, where his books became pioneers in modern approaches. The film takes us to the world of his childhood, to tell us how this Arab mind was formed.
- A journey of a Director searching for a beach photographer who took a picture of his father in the 1970s.
- The film sheds light on the consequences of the rush of rich foreigners, artists, celebrities and retirees to acquire riads or houses, in big Moroccan cities such as Marrakech, Fez, and Essaouira.