Sebastian 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Hounds of War 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
A Quiet Place Day One 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Cabrini 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Seeking Mavis Beacon 2024 - Movies (Jan 5th)
The Beast of the Bales 2024 - Movies (Jan 4th)
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VICE News Presents Searching for Masculinity 2024 - Movies (Jan 4th)
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Bloody Trip The Equinox Killer 2024 - Movies (Jan 4th)
AMP House Massacre 2024 - Movies (Jan 4th)
Alien Weekend 2024 - Movies (Jan 4th)
Black Box Diaries 2024 - Movies (Jan 4th)
Disciples in the Moonlight 2024 - Movies (Jan 3rd)
Sonic the Hedgehog 3 2024 - Movies (Jan 3rd)
A Little Womens Christmas 2024 - Movies (Jan 3rd)
A Clockwork Shining Kubricks Odyssey 3 2024 - Movies (Jan 3rd)
Cheers Portland The Strip Club Capital of America 2024 - Movies (Jan 3rd)
Wallace and Gromit Vengeance Most Fowl 2024 - Movies (Jan 3rd)
Luther Never Too Much 2024 - Movies (Jan 3rd)
He Aint Heavy 2024 - Movies (Jan 3rd)
Married to Medicine - (Jan 6th)
When Calls the Heart - (Jan 6th)
The Real Housewives of Potomac - (Jan 6th)
90 Day Pillow Talk Before the 90 Days - (Jan 6th)
Sister Wives - (Jan 6th)
The Masked Singer- AfterMask - (Jan 6th)
Countryfile - (Jan 6th)
The Read - (Jan 6th)
90 Day Fiance- Before the 90 Days - (Jan 6th)
Snapped - (Jan 6th)
Very Scary People - (Jan 6th)
Where We Call Home - (Jan 6th)
Home Town - (Jan 6th)
Match of the Day 2 - (Jan 5th)
The Masked Singer - (Jan 5th)
Room to Improve - (Jan 5th)
Police 24/7 - (Jan 5th)
The Great Canadian Pottery Throw Down - (Jan 5th)
Rich House, Poor House - (Jan 5th)
22 Kids and Counting - (Jan 5th)
In September of 1938, a great storm rose up on the coast of West Africa and began making its way across the Atlantic Ocean. The National Weather Bureau learned about it from merchant ships at sea and predicted it would blow itself out at Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, as such storms usually did. Within 24 hours, the storm ripped into the New England shore with enough fury to set off seismographs in Sitka, Alaska. Traveling at a shocking 60 miles per hour - three times faster than most tropical storms - it was astonishingly swift and powerful, with peak wind gusts up to 186 mph. Over 600 people were killed, most by drowning. Another hundred were never found. Property damage was estimated at $400 million - over 8,000 homes were destroyed, 6,000 boats wrecked or damaged.
The storm of 1993 that ravaged the Eastern Seaboard was bigger than any since the 1800s. Most were expecting only more unseasonable warmth, and were caught off-guard by the hurricane winds, massive thunderstorms, and fierce blizzards. Meteorologists puzzled over bizarre reports from their computers. Late warnings went largely unheard. Video footage from Florida to Maine documents nature's savagery.
As co-created by environmentalists Stephan Poulle and Nicolas Koutsikas, the documentary Gulf Stream and the Next Ice Age argues and provides evidence for the idea that mankind is wreaking permanent and potentially irreversible damage on the ecosystem by interfering with the natural course of the Gulf Stream. Koutsikas and Poulle suggest that this interference, in turn, will prompt a new Ice Age that virtually destroys the modern world.
In 1980, the eruption of Mount St. Helens leveled 230 square miles, sent 540 million tons of ash and volcanic rock twelve miles into the air, and blasted one cubic mile of earth from the crest of the Cascade Mountain Range. Illustrates the terrifying fury of the most destructive volcanic disaster in American history through aerial photography and survivors' own words. Shows examples of nature's plant and animal recovery seventeen years later.
This astounding documentary delves into the mysteries of the Tunguska event – one of the largest cosmic disasters in the history of civilisation. At 7.15 am, on 30th June 1908, a giant fireball, as bright the sun, exploded in the sky over Tunguska in central Siberia. Its force was equivalent to twenty million tonnes of TNT, and a thousand times greater than that of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 1945. An estimated sixty million trees were felled over an area of over two thousand square kilometres - an area over half the size of Rhode Island. If the explosion had occurred over London or Paris, hundreds of thousands of people would have been killed.
Nashville Rises is the first documentary film about the city of Nashville, Tennessee's response to the 2010 Tennessee floods. It premiered at the 42nd Nashville Film Festival on April 14, 2011 and received the festival's "Ground Zero Tennessee Spirit Award for Best Short Documentary Film". The film was narrated by Billy Bob Thornton and directed by Zac Adams.
Track monsoons, hurricanes, blizzards, and tornadoes. Take a journey around the planet to experience our most extreme storms and to witness the dramatic-and often perilous-efforts of scientists in the pursuit of understanding weather.Join meteorologists in the cockpit of a P-3 weather plane as they penetrate the eye of a hurricane; and in the tense, decisive moments on the road as they focus their radar on an approaching tornado, traveling to the heart of severe storms to learn what makes weather systems tick. Experience the bumpy ride into the sudden and spectacular calm of a hurricane’s eye, or the commando-like raid to the very brink of a killer tornado, and experience one of the elemental joys of doing science: that of confronting nature head-on to divine its awesome secrets.
"Trouble the Water" takes you inside Hurricane Katrina in a way never before seen on screen. The film opens the day before the storm makes landfall-just blocks away from the French Quarter but far from the New Orleans that most tourists knew. Kimberly Rivers Roberts, an aspiring rap artist, is turning her new video camera on herself and her Ninth Ward neighbors trapped in the city. Weaving an insider's view of Katrina with a mix of verité and in-your-face filmmaking, it is a redemptive tale of self-described street hustlers who become heroes-two unforgettable people who survive the storm and then seize a chance for a new beginning.
Global warming in context. What the climate of the past tells us about the climate of the future.
The last representatives of Mixteco culture inhabit a village in the Sierra Madre. Deprived of their identity by modern civilization, they are facing an even bigger threat: a landslide that may destroy the village during the next torrential rains. The mayor tries to prevent the disaster. He wants to invite a geologist, so that the approaching danger can be officially confirmed. But no help is coming and the inhabitants must simply wait for the disaster.