Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-19 of 19
- A mother, Victoria, is trying to put her dark past as a Russian drug courier behind her, but retired cop Damon forces Victoria to do his bidding by holding her daughter hostage.
- At the beginning of our story it's 1995 and two fledgling filmmakers, Richard and Daniel, are on their way to make a documentary about life in prison. As a favor to Richard's uncle, the warden has given the filmmakers and their crew unprecedented access to all of the prison including death row where we learn that an inmate will be put to death in seven days. At this point, Execution moves forward to the present day where we meet Mimi who is trying to sell the film that Richard and Daniel are in the process of editing. The prison footage, we find out, was confiscated by the warden ten years earlier and has just now been returned to the filmmakers. Throughout the rest of Execution, the present and the past cross as we discover just how much or how little Richard and Daniel have changed. Back in the prison, the warden takes the filmmakers on their first visit to death row to meet the condemned man. It's here that Daniel has an epiphany that the focus of their documentary must be about this man and his final moment in the electric chair. For the rest of the film Daniel and Richard clash over just how far to take their film and who is really in charge. As the execution date draws near, the audience will witness the step-by-step process that goes into an actual execution and we come to see how the condemned man and the warden share many of the same feelings and ultimately travel this journey together.
- Journey back in time and witness the rise of "America's Most Interesting City". On May 7, 1718, French explorer Bienville founded La Nouvelle-Orleans (New Orleans) in honor of the Duke of Orleans. Napoleon sold Louisiana to America via the Louisiana Purchase (1803). Since then, Mardi Gras has become synonymous with "The City That Care Forgot". Art mirrors life with tragedy and pain. New Orleans has known both, the Vieux Carre fire (1788), the Battle of New Orleans (1815), hurricane Katrina (2005). From this pain comes inspiration. The invention of Jazz in New Orleans is a reflection of the city's hardships. Fat Tuesday, a springtime celebration of life, the Romans knew as Saturnalia and the Greeks knew as Kronia. Humanities' need to celebrate life has brought millions to New Orleans to enjoy "the greatest free show on Earth"! New Orleans turns three hundred in 2018. Her tradition of creativity and love bind "The Crescent City" in a way one can only understand if you visit. To all whom have considered visiting "The Big Easy", from the French Quarter to Treme, from Algiers Point to the Garden District, Laissez les bons temps rouler (Let the good times roll)! New Orleans and her Mardi Gras await you!
- An abused wife's plan to escape her husband goes awry when she accidentally kills him, causing her to split on a cross-country drive with her best friend and his corpse in tow.
- Architect Danny Forster gets up close and personal with mega construction. Along the way, Danny explores design and construction of amazing structures. Danny loves what he does, brings some background knowledge, and gets hands on at every site.
- Comedian Tig Notaro travels across the country in order to put on a series of performances in the homes, back yards, barns, and basements of her most loyal fans.
- Two best friends trying to escape a world of danger.
- Life is unexceptional for Paul in his small, marshland town of Delisle, Mississippi. The frequent night terrors were about the height of excitement for him. However, his life will change forever after witnessing an unspeakable, gruesome tragedy. The event sparks to life something hidden inside Paul. The line between reality and dream become blurred as his night terrors begin intertwining with everything around him. As the horrors once confined to his dreams begin to dance into his waking life; Paul struggles to cling to the delicate fabric of his sanity. With the world around him quickly unraveling; Paul must come to terms with this new reality or face losing everything he loves.
- A man who hides behind a mask gets entangled in a night of drugs and violence. Will he survive or fall victim to his choices?
- The beautiful scenery that accounts for so much of the charm of the Gulf of Mexico is adequately pictured in Gaumont's "See America First," No. 74, a release devoted to "The Mississippi Coast." These pictures show the principal points of interest at Pass Christian, Gulfport, Biloxi and Beauvoir. These towns give an excellent idea of life in the state which is so hospitably southern and historically interesting. At Pass Christian are pictured the home of John M. Parker, Progressive candidate for Vice-President last year, the beautiful Beach Shell Road along the coast, and the Herndon cottage which is occupied by President Wilson when he winters in the south. Gulfport offers views of its beautiful resort hotel, its country club, and thousands of feet of yellow pine, for Gulfport is one of the largest shipping points in the world for this lumber. Beauvoir is notable for its echoes of the Confederacy. First in importance in the pictures is the home of Jefferson Davis. Hither he retired after the war to write the history of the Lost Cause. There is also a Confederate Soldiers' Home. Biloxi is commercially the most important town on the Mississippi coast. The pictures show the Bay of Biloxi, Howard and Benarchy Avenues, as well as typical scenes near the city.
- Short
- How did one tiny school district in impoverished Mississippi overcome tremendous adversity, social economics and Hurricane Katrina, only to become the top academic performers in under a year? Find out how in 'The Minds of Mississippi'
- A tale of a young vacationer afflicted with CDD (Compulsive Dancing Disorder).
- Hollywood portrayals of voodoo have strayed from the true message and purpose of this 10,000 year old religion. While many see voodooism as shrouded in mystery, the practice of voodoo is actually derived from African beliefs and focuses on helping people by warding away evil entities. Mambo Brandi is a popular and established priestess of voodoo, located in New Orleans. She loves to educate people about the true nature of voodooism and owns her own shop "Voodoo Authentica." Jesse is in the process of initiating new voodoo priests and priestesses, welcoming them into his family. Toby shows his practice through possessions and voodoo work. Les Mysteres will explore the practice of voodoo, following Mambo Brandi, Houngan Jesse, and Houngan Toby.
- 2013– 1hTV-PG7.4 (11)TV EpisodeFour families transform their homes for the holidays in hope of winning $50,000.