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1-8 of 8
- At the age of 6, Ignacio said to her parents: "I am a girl, and my name is Violeta". Her parents walked with her the difficult path into womanhood. This documentary highlights how difficult the process is for transgender children.
- Golden-age Sarannah is married to Hamdy, an Egyptian man 30-years her junior. Could this be true love - or is it yet another unspoken 'business' relationship so often seen in contemporary Luxor? Sarannah feels she was given a new shot at life at 50 and can now re-live her youth. Madly in love with Hamdy, all she wants to do is spend time with him and enjoy life. In her eyes, he is not like the other gold-digging Egyptian men. Certainly not like Khaled, who married her friend Nerchia, before finding a much younger 2nd Egyptian wife to provide him with children. Nerchia struggles to accept that the kind loving man she loved changed so drastically. She has to make hard decisions now that she knows his true color. As for Abdel-Rahim, a local tour guide married with 2 kids, he will do anything to find a well-to-do foreign woman to secure his future. In the primitive part of the touristic city of Luxor, locals try to escape poverty by marrying older, foreign women. Abdel, like many others, connects with women online to entice them to move to Luxor. It is through an online platform he connects with an older German woman, Monica. After a few months of online romance, she falls for him, moves to Luxor and promises to take care of him. Through confessional meetings with these couples, we get a rare and honest insight into these relationships - mutual arrangements of a sort, that blurs the boundaries between business and romance.
- Shining a light into the murky world of police infiltration, incitement, and agent provocateurs, Manufacturing The Threat shows how Canada's policing and national security agencies, granted additional powers after 9/11, routinely break laws with little to no accountability or oversight. For the first time ever, a feature-length documentary is examining the issue of agent provocateurs and entrapment in Canada's national security apparatus. Manufacturing the Threat is a thrilling and emotional film, which examines a deeply disturbing episode in Canadian history when an impoverished couple was coerced by undercover law enforcement agents into carrying out a terrorist bombing. Further, viewers learn that this case is far from unique in the context of Canadian intelligence.
- This is the tale of three artists who navigate the fashion world: from the front rows at shows to their tiny hotel rooms, constantly on the move, they struggle to thrive in social media culture in a decaying world which is now forced to reinvent itself.
- Stop the Boats is the story of indefinite detention and torture told by asylum seekers including children from within offshore detention prisons on the remote islands of Nauru and Manus, where they are being held by the Australian Government because they arrived by boats and sought asylum in Australia. The horror inside the detention prison was secretly filmed and smuggled out from Nauru and Manus Island on USBs, few shots at a time. No media or journalists were allowed to visit the detention camps which operated in total media blackout and secrecy.
- How Apple, Starbucks, Haier, Grab, and Japan Airlines survived corporate crisis.
- Take a look at some insights from the entrepreneurs behind such ground-breaking enterprises as Lonely Planet, Airbnb, Netflix, TikTok and Zumba.