Sister Hanna is a spirited, witty, resolute, warm-hearted, and - attractive nun. With her wit and street cred, she takes charge of Kaltenthal Cloister, transforming it into a popular refuge for all those seeking help of one kind or another. She also brings new life to the sleepy provincial community, proving herself quite a match for her great rival and opponent, the mayor Wolfgang Wöller.
Isabel is a TV show that tells the story of Queen Isabella I of Castile, exploring her rise to power, her struggles as a female ruler in a patriarchal society, and her role in shaping Spanish history. The show delves into court intrigue, political alliances, and the conflicts Isabella faced with the Inquisition, among other historical events. It presents a gripping narrative of her life, achievements, and personal relationships.
A Hidden Life tells the true story of Franz Jägerstätter, a farmer from the Austrian alpine village of St. Radegund, who becomes a conscientious objector and refuses to fight for the Nazis during World War II. Despite facing social ostracism, imprisonment, and the death penalty, he remains steadfast in his beliefs and integrity.
American seminary student Michael Kovak travels to Italy to take an exorcism course. Disillusioned with his father, he decides to become a priest and abdicate his vows upon completion. However, after ordination, he writes a letter of resignation, citing a lack of faith. His superior convinces him to attend a class on exorcism in Rome. Michael reluctantly agrees and meets Father Lucas, a renowned exorcist. Skeptical at first, Michael witnesses supernatural events and eventually performs an exorcism on a possessed girl. After the girl's death, Father Lucas becomes possessed himself, leading Michael to perform another exorcism and regain his faith. He leaves Rome and becomes a priest.
The Hunchback of Notre Dame follows the story of Quasimodo, a deformed bell-ringer, who falls in love with a gypsy dancer named Esmeralda. The film explores themes of xenophobia, intolerance, and social progress as Quasimodo struggles to find acceptance in a society that judges him by his appearance. With the backdrop of the magnificent Notre Dame Cathedral, the movie showcases the changing times and the clash between tradition and modernity.
Soul Man is an American sitcom that aired
The year is 1988. It is 35 years after the events of Fred Schepisi’s classic film, The Devil’s Playground. Tom Allen, now in his 40s and recently widowed, is a respected Sydney psychiatrist and father of two children. A practicing Catholic, Tom accepts an offer by the Bishop of Sydney to become a counselor of priests. During these sessions, he will uncover a scandal and become embroiled in the Church’s attempts to cover it up. Tom’s quest for justice will push him to his limits, and reveal a side of Church power and official corruption he could never have imagined.
Keeping the Faith is a romantic comedy about two best friends, a priest named Brian and a rabbi named Jake, who fall in love with the same woman, Anna. As they navigate their feelings for her, they also struggle with their respective religious commitments and the challenges that come with them.
In The Night of the Iguana, a defrocked priest leads a bus tour in Mexico, where he encounters a group of diverse characters including an alcoholic, a poet, a tour-bus guide, and a spinster. The priest's life takes a dramatic turn when he becomes involved with a widow, leading to tension and conflicts among the group. The film explores themes of love, desire, and redemption against the backdrop of the Mexican landscape.
A hunchbacked bell-ringer must save a beautiful gypsy from being unjustly executed as he faces oppression and social conflict in medieval Paris.
A captivating retelling of the tumultuous relationship between King Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, exploring their passionate love affair, political intrigues, and the tragic consequences that follow.
A young lawyer moves into a prewar apartment building, only to discover that strange and supernatural occurrences are happening around him. He begins to suspect that the building itself has a dark secret and is determined to uncover the truth, but this puts him in grave danger as he becomes lured into a trap orchestrated by a secret society.
When the newly elected Pope suffers a panic attack just before his first public appearance, a psychoanalyst is brought in to help him overcome his fears and doubts.
Birgitta is a young student in the 50's. Living among drugdealers, prostitutes, homosexuals and killers in Stockholms nightlife...
While searching for his missing brother, a man gets entangled in a web of witchcraft and dark secrets at a remote house in England.
In the 1950s, young boys were placed in orphanages and endure harsh and austere living conditions. As a united group, they supported each other and survived despite bullying, hardship and little hope for better days. While these children were doing their best to survive, they had no way to suspect the secret dealings between the clergy, the medical profession and the government that will inevitably seal their fates. The institution faced with a precarious financial situation, the solution is to transform the orphanage into a psychiatric institute in order to obtain additional subsidies. To demonstrate the need for this change in status, the orphans are labeled as insane by the very people who took them in to help them. While their future as orphans was already precarious, they become prisoners of an asylum system from which they have little hope of being able to free themselves even as they grow older.
In the Holy Roman Empire during the 15th century, a royal siren finds herself entangled in a web of politics, religion, and forbidden love. She must navigate through forced marriages, executions, and the corrupt Catholic Church to protect herself and those she cares about.
Léon Morin, a Catholic priest, forms an unlikely friendship with a young widow in Nazi-occupied France, leading to conversations about faith, seduction, and anti-Semitism.
Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God is a powerful documentary that delves into the widespread sexual abuse of children within the Catholic Church. The film follows the story of four deaf men who were molested by a priest in a school for the deaf in the 1960s. As they attempt to confront their abuser and seek justice, they uncover a vast web of corruption and secrecy within the institution. Through interviews, reenactments, and archival footage, the film sheds light on the traumatic experiences of the victims and the cover-up orchestrated by the Church.