[Part 1] Meet The Natives is a Reality Show/Documentary on Channel 4 which sees five tribesmen leave their villages in Vanuatu in the South Pacific and visit the United Kingdom in search of Prince Philip, whom they believe is the physical embodiment of the son of their God. Filming their adventures they take a look at the British way of life.
[Part 2] Meet The Natives is a Reality Show/Documentary on Channel 4 which sees five tribesmen leave their villages in Vanuatu in the South Pacific and visit the United Kingdom in search of Prince Philip, whom they believe is the physical embodiment of the son of their God. Filming their adventures they take a look at the British way of life.
[Part 3] Meet The Natives is a Reality Show/Documentary on Channel 4 which sees five tribesmen leave their villages in Vanuatu in the South Pacific and visit the United Kingdom in search of Prince Philip, whom they believe is the physical embodiment of the son of their God. Filming their adventures they take a look at the British way of life.
[Part 1] Frinton-on-Sea is a town that doesn't like change. The shops, the sea front and even the people haven't changed for decades. So when Network Rail announced it was going to automate the town's manually operated level-crossing gates, there was a call to arms. Filmmaker Marc Isaacs meets the people who have decided to grow old in England's most conservative seaside resort.
[Part 2] Frinton-on-Sea is a town that doesn't like change. The shops, the sea front and even the people haven't changed for decades. So when Network Rail announced it was going to automate the town's manually operated level-crossing gates, there was a call to arms. Filmmaker Marc Isaacs meets the people who have decided to grow old in England's most conservative seaside resort.
[Part 1] Filmmaker Sue Bourne's mother has Alzheimer's and now lives in a nursing home in Scotland. For the last three ... years Sue, and her daughter Holly, have been filming with Sue's mother. Their film is a funny, charming, quirky and sometimes harrowing record of how the family have fumbled along trying to make sense of the disease.
[Part 2] Filmmaker Sue Bourne's mother has Alzheimer's and now lives in a nursing home in Scotland. For the last three years Sue, and her daughter Holly, have been filming with Sue's mother. Their film is a funny, charming, quirky and sometimes harrowing record of how the family have fumbled along trying to make sense of the disease.
[Part 1] Molly Dineen's RTS award-winning 1989 documentary about the men and women who work in Islington's Angel Tube station.
[Part 2] Molly Dineen's RTS award-winning 1989 documentary about the men and women who work in Islington's Angel Tube station.
25:45
The Boy Whose Skin Fell Off [Part 1]
[Part 1] Jonny Kennedy died in 2003 aged 36. He had a terrible genetic condition called Dystrophic Epidermolysis Bullosa (EB) – which meant that his skin literally fell off at the slightest touch, leaving his body covered in agonising sores and leading to a final fight against skin cancer. In his last months Jonny decided to work with filmmaker Patrick Collerton to document his life and death, and the result was a film, first broadcast in March 2004, that was an uplifting, confounding and provocatively humorous story of a singular man. Not shying away from the grim reality of EB, the film was also a celebration of a life lived to the full.
24:56
The Boy Whose Skin Fell Off [Part 2]
[Part 2] Jonny Kennedy died in 2003 aged 36. He had a terrible genetic condition called Dystrophic Epidermolysis Bullosa (EB) – which meant that his skin literally fell off at the slightest touch, leaving his body covered in agonising sores and leading to a final fight against skin cancer. In his last months Jonny decided to work with filmmaker Patrick Collerton to document his life and death, and the result was a film, first broadcast in March 2004, that was an uplifting, confounding and provocatively humorous story of a singular man. Not shying away from the grim reality of EB, the film was also a celebration of a life lived to the full.
[Part 1] On the morning of September 11, 2001, brothers Jules and Gedeon Naudet were working on a documentary about a rookie New York City firefighter. Hearing a roar in the sky, Jules turned his camera upward--just in time to film the only existing image of the first plane crashing into the World Trade Center. In a fateful instant, Jules and Gedeon became eyewitnesses to the most shocking and defining incident of our time. With cameras rolling, the Naudets followed NYC firefighters into the heart of what would be known as Ground Zero. What emerged is an unforgettably powerful visual document and a stirring tribute to real-life heroes who, in their city's darkest hour, rose to extraordinary acts of courage and compassion.
[Part 2] On the morning of September 11, 2001, brothers Jules and Gedeon Naudet were working on a documentary about a rookie New York City firefighter. Hearing a roar in the sky, Jules turned his camera upward--just in time to film the only existing image of the first plane crashing into the World Trade Center. In a fateful instant, Jules and Gedeon became eyewitnesses to the most shocking and defining incident of our time. With cameras rolling, the Naudets followed NYC firefighters into the heart of what would be known as Ground Zero. What emerged is an unforgettably powerful visual document and a stirring tribute to real-life heroes who, in their city's darkest hour, rose to extraordinary acts of courage and compassion.
[Part 3] On the morning of September 11, 2001, brothers Jules and Gedeon Naudet were working on a documentary about a rookie New York City firefighter. Hearing a roar in the sky, Jules turned his camera upward--just in time to film the only existing image of the first plane crashing into the World Trade Center. In a fateful instant, Jules and Gedeon became eyewitnesses to the most shocking and defining incident of our time. With cameras rolling, the Naudets followed NYC firefighters into the heart of what would be known as Ground Zero. What emerged is an unforgettably powerful visual document and a stirring tribute to real-life heroes who, in their city's darkest hour, rose to extraordinary acts of courage and compassion.
[Part 4] On the morning of September 11, 2001, brothers Jules and Gedeon Naudet were working on a documentary about a rookie New York City firefighter. Hearing a roar in the sky, Jules turned his camera upward--just in time to film the only existing image of the first plane crashing into the World Trade Center. In a fateful instant, Jules and Gedeon became eyewitnesses to the most shocking and defining incident of our time. With cameras rolling, the Naudets followed NYC firefighters into the heart of what would be known as Ground Zero. What emerged is an unforgettably powerful visual document and a stirring tribute to real-life heroes who, in their city's darkest hour, rose to extraordinary acts of courage and compassion.
29:42
The Art Of Catching Lobsters [Part 1]
[Part 1] Shot entirely on the beautiful, rugged North Cornish coast, this feature length documentary chronicles the life of Jane’s husband Nick as a fisherman, beachcomber and playwright. Already a stroke victim, Nick is unexpectedly diagnosed with cancer and from that moment on the film captures Nick’s efforts to pass on his knowledge and experience to his sons.
29:45
The Art Of Catching Lobsters [Part 2]
[Part 2] Shot entirely on the beautiful, rugged North Cornish coast, this feature length documentary chronicles the life of Jane’s husband Nick as a fisherman, beachcomber and playwright. Already a stroke victim, Nick is unexpectedly diagnosed with cancer and from that moment on the film captures Nick’s efforts to pass on his knowledge and experience to his sons.
29:31
The Art Of Catching Lobsters [Part 3]
[Part 3] Shot entirely on the beautiful, rugged North Cornish coast, this feature length documentary chronicles the life of Jane’s husband Nick as a fisherman, beachcomber and playwright. Already a stroke victim, Nick is unexpectedly diagnosed with cancer and from that moment on the film captures Nick’s efforts to pass on his knowledge and experience to his sons.
[Part 1] My Fake Baby explores the lives of women who spend hundreds, and sometimes thousands, of pounds on life-like baby dolls. Known as "reborns" some of the dolls have beating hearts, others have tiny veins and even milk spots. Loved like real babies, they're taken for walks, cuddled and even have their nappies changed.
[Part 2] My Fake Baby explores the lives of women who spend hundreds, and sometimes thousands, of pounds on life-like baby dolls. Known as "reborns" some of the dolls have beating hearts, others have tiny veins and even milk spots. Loved like real babies, they're taken for walks, cuddled and even have their nappies changed.