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- 60 women are waiting for their execution on death row. Who are they? We decided to follow five of them. Dive in these women's lives full of horror, hope, death, and love, in one of the most terrible places in the USA, death row.
- Last month, 82 Nigerian schoolgirls were released after 3 years of imprisonment. In exchange, 5 terrorist leaders walked free - These leaders belong to Boko Haram, the most bloodthirsty terrorist group on the planet. The group gained global notoriety after their kidnapping of 276 students in 2014, over 100 of which have not yet been released. Their objective: to establish a Caliphate and impose sharia - Islamic law - in the heart of Africa. In an attempt to understand who these terrorists are, how they operate, and what kind of a threat they represent to Africa and the rest of the world, we have investigated in Nigeria, Cameroon and on the border of Niger and Nigeria, meeting former prisoners, repented jihadists and troops on the frontline.
- This is a hip reinvention of the travel show, mixing crazy experiences with surprising facts, and an interactive 360°experience. Episodes in Las Vegas, New-Zealand, Italy, Brazil and Mexico. In each episode, our two journalists will bring along a mysterious yellow suitcase containing a 360° camera, through which viewers will have access to four 360° scenes : the Thrill 360, the Contemplation 360, the Secret 360 and the Event 360. This innovative show uses a virtual reality camera to plunge the viewers fully into the most amazing spots of the world, via a mobile and tablet application.
- Can Monsanto chemicals permanently alter your child's genes? Doctors in Argentina think so, as they expose the epidemic of birth defects, childhood cancers, and disease plaguing the children of Argentina's farmers.
- In Switzerland, covering an area of 120,000 square meters, Geneva freeport shelters tens of billions of Euros of merchandise. A tax free area where the world's wealthiest, speculators, collectors and art dealers store exceptional wines, diamonds, and especially works of art, in the greatest secrecy. A secrecy that can allow questionable financial operations. At a time when the secrecy of Swiss banking is under international pressure, art is the new shelter of hidden international finance. Geneva freeport is today a place linked to the concealment of stolen art pieces, money laundering, and tax evasion. Under the freeport's rules, objects could remain in untaxed limbo, in theory, forever. Treasures have come and they have not left. What does Geneva freeport really contain? Let's investigate the most secret vault in the world.
- Fighting restlessly, beheading women and killing children with a smile on your face, nothing is easier with Captagon, the jihadists' very own amphetamine. Hundreds of millions of pills are produced in Syria, the new hub for a drug trade that feeds the most dangerous fighters in the world. When the Kurds seized Kobane, the jihadists' pockets were full of pills. Every day large quantities of Captagon are seized in Jordan on their way to the Gulf states, where the drug flows at all Saudi and Emirati parties. A trade that generates millions of dollars and ensures fighters are supplied with weapons, according to experts. In Jordan, a pill that costs 1$ is sold at around 20$ in Dubai's nightclubs. From Lebanon to Jordan, through Dubai, we will follow the trail of Captagon, a drug barely known in the West. From the ones who fight it to the ones who use it, we'll track smugglers with the Jordanian DEA, and meet former jihadists and refugees trying to escape their daily struggle.
- The first documentary to create a conspiracy theory in order to show how it is built and how to fight it."The truth is hidden from us", "the government is behind it". After the terrorist attacks, these kind of theories spread on the Internet and are relayed by websites. So we have invented a fake conspiracy theory and made a movie out of it. Enlightening.
- They want us to call them « The Soldiers of God »... These legions of holy war are currently active behind the scenes. They are claiming 3 common objectives with ISIS. First they want to set up the Islamic State (the Caliphate) from Syria to Irak, Palestine and even Lebanon. But most of all, they are dying to introduce and enforce Sharia law. To do so, they need to crush their two outspoken ennemies : the Shiites and Bachar Al Assad. For more than 10 days, our journalists team has been allowed to get exclusively immersed into different Jihadist factions. Some of them came from ISIS, other are more independent. For the very first time, a TV camera followed the everyday life of these men and even women, who claim to fight for God. Let's get immersed into one of the most bloodthirsty fighting faction of Syria.
- « You won't be settled in Australia ». Here is a slogan from Tony Abbott, Australian Prime Minister, very proud of having set up the hardest immigration policy in the world. To face illegal migration issues, 8000 « boat people », and 20 000 asylum applications, he decided to « sell » them to poor countries and islands in Oceania such as PapuaNew Guinea, Nauru. Recently, Cambodia accepted a 40 million dollar cheque to « welcome » these immigrants. This astonishing investigation mixes moving scenes with animation footage, to show their detention conditions.
- This movie tells the unique story of the Ayachis, a French Muslim family from Aix-en-Provence who traded their peaceful lives for revolution and Jihad in Syria in the name of Allah. The Ayachis are no ordinary Jihadists. Their path and ideas couldn't be further from the clichés to which they're associated. This family, headed by a Syrian father, was hailed as a model of Muslim integration in France in the 80's, notably in a televised documentary. The father, imam Bassam Ayachi, was exiled to France in the 70's. He descends from an old and prestigious family of the Syrian Sunni aristocracy. His son, Abdelrahman Ayachi, brilliant student at the university of Aix-en-Provence then Brussels, founded a small computer business. Then he became a famous warlord in Syria. He doesn't follow Ben Laden's example, but that of Che Guevara! The Ayachi family fights against Bachar El Assad but also against ISIS. Walking the line between Middle-East and Europe, father and son both preach the benefits of Sharia and polygamy...but they also praise democracy values, those of 1789 or May 1968. Through the story of this family like no other, this movie evokes the complex relationship between two worlds: West and East, whose intimate relationship is shaping our society and civilisation. This film follows the steps of the father, son, mother and sister. Stéphane Malterre, the director, follows them between Syria, France and Belgium.
- To make a film about, and with, Kirk Douglas is to travel through the 20th century and, in doing so, revisit practically the entire history of Hollywood. That is a testament to the scope of this life, and the scale of the myth.
- Jena Karam is 20 years old, lives in Beirut, and is trying to find her place in a society dominated by men. How? By practicing one of the most violent sports in the world, Mixed Martial Arts (MMA). Throughout her life she has had to overcome many hardships, which may explain the choices that she has made. Time's Up.
- After three years of war, Yemen is facing its most serious humanitarian crisis since the end of the Second World War. 'Yemen, Chaos in silence' is an unprecedented journey which tells the story of a conflict taking place virtually without exterior witnesses. From Aden in the south to Sanaa in the north, via Taez, the front line, this film explores a devastated country eroded by political and religious divisions and ravaged by cholera.
- Since last August, nineteen oil wells have been set on fire by Islamic State jihadists, to slow down the Iraqi forces in the offensive to take back control of Mosul. Only ten have been completely put out. Iraqi firefighters have been fighting every day for months to try to control the flames of the oil wells in the region. They work in disastrous conditions, columns of toxic fumes escape continuously, covering Qayyarah and its surroundings with a thick layer of soot. What are the health consequences and economic impact of burning oil wells? Iraq seems to have been struck once again by the oil curse.
- It is an exceptional documentary, filmed in a country no camera can penetrate - a world exclusive. In a context in which the biggest international networks are unable to present images of this forgotten war, the Yemeni director Khadija Al Salami has entrusted her camera to 3 children who become war correspondents for this documentary in Yemen. Ahmed is 11, Rima is 8 and Youssef is 9. It is them who will recount the daily life of the Yemeni people under Saudi airstrikes. They meet other kids, collecting the testimonies of wounded children in hospital and those who lost their parents in the airstrikes. With the innocence of children, they also interview adults - a painter, a rapper, a model who has become 'Miss War' on social media - and ask them to send a message to those who they believe are the only ones who can stop the war - the EuropeanUnion. Constructed like a story tale, with no images of violence, this deeply moving documentary shows the cruel reality of war through the eyes of children, and the incredible hope that they place in Europe to put an end to the conflict.
- Road-trip through the USA voting for Trump. From Detroit to Austin, our journalists are trying to understand how "Dangerous Donald" became President of the United States of America. How did he manage to seduce so many voters? What are his supporters expecting from him?
- Rafi, Salman, Said and Ali are all under 18 years old. They come from Afghanistan, Syria and Pakistan. After months of wandering, fleeing wars in their country, they found themselves stuck in Calais, where they are trying to survive, waiting for something better. Their dream: to get to England. How? By climbing into containers or slipping onto the axles of trucks, risking their lives. Who cares about these isolated minors in the Calais Jungle, the largest slum in Europe?
- Africa is in fashion. Its flag? Wax print, which more and more Franco-African designers are choosing to incorporate into their creations. Flora Coquerel, a Franco-Beninese woman and the winner of Miss France 2014, invites us to follow them in their intense and globalised life for a success story - how the colours of a simple fabric have become the symbol of the cultural melting pot of an entire generation.
- Discover the epic story of the first years of one of the greatest European football clubs.
- Kelly Fraser is 21 and she's a star. Why is she so successful? Because she restores pride and hope to an entire nation. A beautiful but wild and isolated region, where life is difficult and the suicide rate is the highest in the world.
- Hurt but still alive, Ophelie, Kevin, Robert, Claude-Emmanuel survived the Paris Attacks, November 13th. Disabled, wounded, disfigured, they've all fought to show that love is the stronger force. The best tribute to the victims of the attacks, those who didn't have the chance to go on living. The best form of resistance in the face of terrorism.
- The US military, which operates in 146 countries around the world, has to convince 80,000 young people to join its ranks each year. In order to recruit, in the absence of military service, it has set up a very sophisticated program in schools which allows it to enroll thousands of teenagers: the JROTC or junior military reserves. This program concerns more than 3000 public schools, and nearly 500,000 children aged between 14 and 18. They wear uniforms at school and their physical education and optional courses are replaced by education provided by retired military personnel: history of the Armed Forces, civic education, discipline, physical preparation, and in some institutions, firearms and shooting training. The program primarily targets high schools in underprivileged suburbs and minority youths who are promised free education by the army to attract them into its ranks. It is the Pentagon that provides the funds, with a budget of several hundred million dollars, officially to contribute to the "development of youth".
- Let me introduce you to a gladiator of modern times - Marvin Musquin, 12 times world champion in the 250cc. This year, for the first time, he competes in the top category, the 450cc. Let's follow him at an extremely important moment: the 4 days leading up to the tournament of his life. A 52 minute documentary going behind the scenes of the Supercross World Championship, through the eyes of Marvin Musquin, a French rider living in the US. GLADIATOR tells the story of the willingness of a 25 year old man to do anything to pursue his dream, despite major sacrifices, and possible risks.
- A film that makes the viewer laugh, cry, and experience disability at wheelchair level, while never losing hope.