Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-50 of 120
- Educational games show for kids.
- 20021h 30m4.6 (131)TV Special
- Through vintage film clips of past Bond movie epics, and with the participation of several former "Bond Girls", the documentary traced the evolution of the typical James Bond heroine from decorative damsel in distress to gutsy participant. In HD.
- Andy Griffith, Ron Howard, Rodney Dillard, Don Knotts sat in their court room set where the show was made. They talked about the show and how the show affected their lives and how others react to them when they see them now. Archive footage was shown of their favorite moments and of those who had died that were part of the show. Ron Howard walked with Andy Griffith on the road that opened the show. Ron, at age 49 whistled the theme song and threw the rock just as he did as a little boy, and comparative footage was shown. After they finished talking they all hugged and told they loved one another. Andy Griffith turned the lights out and the show ended.
- When the moving truck hits a bump in the road, a quartet of toys stuck in Ohio decide to trek down their owner, who is moving to New York City.
- Renowned restaurateur Wolfgang Puck and his skilled team are followed through intricate catering process for high-profile events like award shows, offering trade secrets and insight into running a world-renowned catering company.
- JOHNNY STRANGE: BORN TO FLY tells the extraordinary story of a 23 year old American adventurer, through candid interviews with his family, friends and Johnny himself, along with 100's of hours from Johnny's private video archive. The film asks the question what does it truly mean to be alive, and to what extent a young man's passion to seek the ultimate thrill was actually the most lethal form of addiction.
- NOT CAROL examines the scourge of postpartum psychosis through the tragic prism of the Carol Coronado murder case. In a judicial system riddled with archaic laws and chronic misunderstanding, Carol's story shines a light on a public health epidemic that is enormous in scale and no one is talking about.
- The list of legendary actors-turned-racers is as short as it is iconic: Paul Newman, Steve McQueen and James Garner. This summer, Velocity follows Patrick Dempsey as he joins this elite group when he tackles the world's oldest and most grueling automotive endurance race, France's 24 Hours of Le Mans.
- Freshman Year is a 14 part documentary series from HBO that followed students during their 9th grade or Freshman Year (1999-2000) at Chatsworth High School in Chatsworth California. The series followed students to get an inside look at how they dealt with their first year of high school and the challenges and adventures they experienced. Some of the students they followed were: Jason Cassel, the jock who was expected to live up to the Cassel family legacy of sports excellence. Jamie Kim, a Korean American student who was elected class president. Josh Levine who hoped high school would be a change from 8th grade where he was picked on for being the "nerd". There were other students as well, one who was trying to get in the modeling world, another who did not care for her studies and was making bad choices. It followed different types of students to try and get the full experience of freshman year.
- Four Catholic school girls face killer nuns, gangsta Jews and giant lobsters.
- A look at modern day leathermen and Leather Contests. This film follows nine contestants in the Mr. L.A. Leather contest.
- To commemorate the showing of the series on the Bravo Channel, the Inside thirtysomething Seminar brought together the show's creators, and actors for a round-table discussion of the show.
- This documentary, shown on the American Movie Classics (AMC) cable channel, answers the question "What does a movie producer do?" It takes the viewer through every step of movie production. The process begins with finding suitable material to make into a film, and continues with pitching the idea to a studio, developing the script, finding the right talent (in front of and behind the camera), shooting the film, marketing the film, and finally, releasing the film at a gala premiere. The complete process can take several years.
- A 60-minute salute to American International Pictures. Entertainment lawyer Samuel Z. Arkoff founded AIP (then called American Releasing Corporation) on a $3000 loan in 1954 with his partner, James H. Nicholson, a former West Coast exhibitor and distributor. The company made its mark by targeting teenagers with quickly produced films that exploited subjects mainstream films were reluctant to tackle. From monsters to beach parties to cycle gangs to the psychedelic youth, many film clips are shown, highlighting the company's successful twenty-five year run in Hollywood. Interviewees include Arkoff, Nicholson (archive footage), Peter Bogdanovich, Bob Burns, Herman Cohen, Roger Corman, Dick Dale, Joe Dante, David Del Valle, Bruce Dern, Roger Ebert, Beverly Garland, Pam Grier, Susan Hart, James L. Honore, Al Kallis, Aron Kincaid, Mark Thomas McGee, Dick Miller, and Burt Topper.
- Weekly kids' documentary series in which an established pop music artist auditions aspiring youth acts, selecting and hiring one lucky winner to perform as the opening act at a single venue on their scheduled concert tour.