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1-14 of 14
- A documentary on the late Vivian Maier, a nanny whose previously unknown cache of 100,000 photographs earned her a posthumous reputation as one of the most accomplished street photographers.
- Conor McPherson's play The Weir is spellbinding, beautiful suspenseful realism combining chilling tales of the supernatural with hilarious banter of a small community in the heart of rural Ireland.
- The six 1970s Salford Khan children are caught between their Pakistani father's insistence on Asian traditions and their English mother's laissez-faire attitude are torn as they decide on their identity as citizens of both modern worlds.
- In the 1970s, as El Salvador moved irrevocably closer to civil war, one man was known as the voice of the poor, the disenfranchised, the disappeared. Appointed Archbishop in 1977, Monsenor Oscar Romero worked tirelessly for peace, justice and human rights, while in constant personal peril. Using the power of the pulpit to denounce official corruption, he inspired millions with his nationally broadcast sermons, until in March of 1980, he was shot dead at the altar. With rare recordings and film footage, and a wide range of interviews with those whose lives were changed by Romero, including church activists, human rights lawyers, former guerrilla fighters and politicians, Monsenor is a timely portrait of the man's quest to speak the truth, though it cost him his life.
- A body on the carpet, three ridiculous Masterpiece Theatre-style suspects and a bumbling Scotland Yard detective solve philosophical quandaries as they investigate: Who killed Jeremy Thumpington-Fffienes?
- How a world famous Swiss photographer died in the penguin empire of the Antarctica.
- The Ugly One is a scalpel-sharp comedy on beauty, identity and getting ahead in life.
- A finely observed study of family life from the novelist and playwright Fay Weldon which offers a superb blended range of serious acting and comedy for three women and two men with an underlying climate change message.
- A documentary about two extra-ordinary Swiss men at an extraordinary cycle race in East Africa.
- Two is a sharp and touching slice of English life set in a pub owned by a savagely bickering husband and wife, Two is a series of short vignettes that skilfully combines pathos and humour.
- How to Settle Accounts with your Laundress by J. Stirling Coyne is a comedy English drama set in the nineteenth century.
- A family gathering at Christmas exposes family animosity, whilst a new guest arouses differing passions.
- David visits archaeological sites where fossils were found illustrating the origins of life on earth, in the ocean. For long, evolution worked very slow and species remained primitive, mostly single-cell, alter fractal. Only the invention of sexual reproduction kick-started genetic diversification.