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- Refined, often millionaires, drug trafficker lawyers evolve within a territory where law, organized crime and corruption meet. They are smugglers, the visible actors of the collusion between criminal organizations and the legal, political and financial structures of countries crushed by narco-violence. This investigation penetrates into the depths of drug trafficking through a little-known angle, that of justice, and aims to deconstruct the preconceived idea of the drug trafficker as the sole responsible for violence. "If you kill, call me" debunks the myth of drug trafficking by penetrating, through drug trafficker lawyers, into the heart of the legal system to reveal its deep complicity with organized crime.
- The al-Mahdi scouts are Shiite Muslims. An Islamic community, originally from southern Lebanon, who follows the prophet Mohamed and his descendants and whose lives are affected by the Israeli-Arab conflict. The al-Mahdi scouts were created in the wake of Hezbollah. The film's examination of three young scouts raises many questions for us. Are they just like other scouts ? What do they tell us of their vision Lebanon, and its reality ?
- Separated by the distance of the countries where they live, four young people are united by their desire to overcome obstacles to conquer their dreams and passions in search of a better life.
- The veil of cumbersome complexities of the French judicial system is lifted to reveal the human stories behind, of those who work the system, and those who are affected by it.
- After a career of more than forty years, Léo Ferré died in 1993. He was the last of the three great monsters of the song still alive, with Brassens and Brel.
- Charles is an old and lonely cemetery keeper. One night at closing time, a visitor calls him out: He's looking for his biological mom's grave. Charles doesn't recognize the dead woman's name, but confronted to that man's distress and determination, he decides to help him. There starts an unusual night for both of them.
- Documentary about the interesting history and outstanding collection of Musee D'Orsay in Paris, France.
- No economic activity feeds as many people and is as crucial to the social harmony of numerous countries as rice cultivation. It feeds nearly half the population of the planet and conditions our global food security. This cereal grain, which occupies 15% of the world's cultivable land, has the power to ensure the political stability or bring down governments. In the spring of 2008, the price of rice rose six fold in six months. Unprecedented. The poor suffer the most from these skyrocketing prices. Demonstrations broke out in 40 countries. There was talk of food riots. Referring to the explosion of prices in 2008, this documentary deals with the challenge of global food by questioning those who manage the world's rice system.
- 'And The Party Goes On and on ' gives an unflinching look at the masquerade that takes place in Bulgaria. The former most closest to Soviet Union Eastern block country has joined the European Union with the American Dream deeply ingrained into its psyche.
- While hunting in the woods with his dog, a man accidentally kills a young boy. Hearing someone approaching, he decides to run away.
- 2011– 1h7.2 (9)TV EpisodeAs the 20th anniversary of the genocide in Rwanda approaches, it's time for some of those who lived it to tell their stories. To reveal what really happened and how it was made possible. People like RTLM journalist, Valérie Bemeriki. She's now serving a life sentence for spreading hate and inciting murders. She provides an inside perspective on the role RTLM played - why she did what she did and if she regrets it. People like French national Pierre Galinier, who turned down the chance to be rescued because the French authorities refused to evacuate his Tutsi girlfriend. People like Czech diplomat Karel Kovanda, who describes what was going on inside the UN Security Council while the people of Rwanda were dying. People like James Kabarebe, the current Rwandan Minister of Defence. What happened in Rwanda in 1994 was not simply the spontaneous eruption of inter-ethnic hatred. It was planned genocide, on an industrial scale. Something that was prepared for at least a year in advance. Lists were made. Weapons were collected. RTLM radio spent months conditioning their audience to believe that one sector of their population represented a threat. We follow several characters in different parts of the city, hour by hour, through that first crucial week when the massacre could have been averted. Using aerial reconstructions of Kigali and innovative CGI, we will criss-cross the city, switching from one character's account to the other's.
- 2011– 57m7.4 (49)TV Episode