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- Summer 1942: A real manhunt took place in Paris. Close to 80,000 Jews were rounded up and deported to concentration camps. Almost none of them ever returned.
- For 20 years, theirs was an ideological duel between two .
- Newly arrived in Los Angeles, and determined to achieve success on Hollywood Boulevard, Elizabeth Short began meeting men. Who could have targeted this green-eyed starlet in this orchestrated crime? Lots of rejected leads, lots of stories.
- Through a nostalgic dive into Italian erotic cinema, between female emancipation, naked starlets, aloof schoolboy jokes, and light comedy, this documentary recounts the flavor of an era: Italy of the 70s and 80s, and the sexual revolution.
- After 1989 and the fall of the Berlin Wall, the Cold War left the newspapers and entered the history textbooks. This reversal of history has left the traditional and clichéed spies, with microfilms and machine-gun umbrellas, very helpless.
- Did Mars ever have life on it? To answer this question, Europe and Russia have launched a unique and ambitious 2-stage project: ExoMars 2016-2018. This documentary is a thrilling look behind the scenes of a magnificent human and scientific adventure. We will uncover the most fascinating aspects of this mission and the search for signs of life on Mars.
- Still, a president is a president. Between paparazzi, staged scenes, and witnesses, these presidential excursions are a publicity stunt rather than real waterfront getaways. From De Gaulle to Sarkozy, each leader has their own Summer ways.
- Created by Morris in 1946, Lucky Luke has established himself as one of the flag-bearers of Franco-Belgian comic books: 80 albums translated in 30 languages, film adaptations, television, series and by-products.
- Hjalmar Schacht is a largely forgotten figure. And yet, Hitler's rise to power depended on him. He was the Banker of the Third Reich, but paradoxically, was never a member of the Nazi party, despite being one of its pillars.
- It took less than 10 years for Hitler to set up the concentration camps, many of which became centers for mass killing. As research and archaeological exploration continue, this documentary reveals the established historiographical elements to explain how a system of concentrating populations so quickly became the rationalized apparatus of genocide.
- In Third Reich, the abuse of drugs made commanders and soldiers feel invincible. The Führer himself took them on daily basis. This is the unbelievable story of the D-IX project and of methamphetamines, which, abundantly furnished to soldiers, changed the course of history.
- What is the studio of Enki Bilal, a major artist of the 9th art who has not stopped creating for over forty years? From the writing to the line, from the story to the color, through the influences, the film restores the creation in progress and opens the doors of the universe to the tormented aesthetics of a man who knew how to impose his style and lift the borders between comics, cinema and contemporary art. Enki Bilal literally reveals the conception of the second part of his album Bug, in which he depicts a future world paralyzed by a computer bug. Between memory and transmission, he draws the past and sketches the future - And his drawing is breathtakingly beautiful.
- Over the years, French comics magazine Pilote has accompanied its readers from childhood to adolescence, and then into adulthood, with such heroes as Astérix, Petit Nicolas, Blueberry, etc. Achille Talon recounts 50 years of a superb epic.
- Often told by the students or politicians' point of view, but more rarely from the police perspective. Using archive documents obtained by derogation from the statutory limitation period of 60 years, but also thanks to testimonies of officers working during this point in history, this factual documentary offers a different reading of May 68. That of policemen plunged in the midst of an unexpected, violent tumult.
- In January 1953, takes place in Bordeaux, the most sensational trial of the post-war. On that day, is considered the Waffen SS division, which has destroyed, the June 10, 1944, the village of Oradour-sur-Glane. On the dock are included alongside the Germans, thirteen French, all from Alsace. How is it, that fellow countrymen, are involved in the massacre of the civilian population? By giving the answer to that question, lawyers of the thirteen defendants will reveal to the whole of France, another unknown drama of the Second World War: the "Malgré-Nous"; soldiers of misfortune all Alsace Lorraine and Moselle, who conscripted by force, had to fight against their will in the ranks of Nazi Germany.