In 1961 Denmark, a traumatized woman's body is found in a hidden room. Detective Carl Mørck and his team from Afdeling Q reopen the cold case, leading them to uncover a conspiracy involving murders, sexual abuse, and police corruption. As they dig deeper into the investigation, they face threats and obstacles that put their lives at risk.
Sarah Snook plays a fertility doctor who must confront a ghost from her past when her young daughter starts exhibiting increasingly strange behavior.
Set in 17th-century Amsterdam, an artist falls in love with a married woman while commissioned to paint her portrait. Their affair leads to reckless speculation in the tulip market, endangering their futures.
After Jacoba Ballard takes a DNA test, she discovers that she has multiple half-siblings with the same sperm donor. This revelation leads her to uncover a shocking scheme involving a popular fertility doctor and the use of donor sperm.
After struggling to conceive, a woman turns to a fertility doctor who appears to be the answer to her prayers. However, as her pregnancy progresses, she begins to suspect that there is something sinister going on.
Melanie McGuire is accused of murdering her husband and disposing of his body in suitcases, as the investigation and trial unfold.
Jessica's son is the light of her life, but when she discovers that his biological father is actually her fertility doctor, she teams up with another one of the doctor's clients to bring him to justice.
A young couple moves into what appears to be the perfect home, but when they discover that they will soon become parents, things begin to fall apart. Rachel, the expectant mother, is haunted by a ghost in a red dress, while Kevin, the soon to be father, has frightening nightmares even while he’s awake. The once happy couple is torn apart by horrific events, which all seem to be centered around the birth of their unborn child.
Surrogacy is fast becoming one of the major issues of the 21st century—celebrities and everyday people are increasingly using surrogates to build their families. But the practice is fraught with complex implications for women, children, and families. What is the impact on the women who serve as surrogates and on the children who are born from surrogacy? In what ways might money complicate things? What about altruistic surrogacy done for a family member or close friend? Is surrogacy a beautiful, loving act or does it simply degrade pregnancy to a service and a baby to a product? Can we find a middle ground? Should we even look for one? From The Center for Bioethics and Culture, producers of the award-winning Eggsploitation (2010, 2013), and Anonymous Father’s Day (2011), Breeders: A Subclass of Women? explores this important issue, talking with surrogates, physicians, psychologists, and activists across the political and ideological spectrum.
The infertility industry in the United States has grown to a multi-billion dollar business. What is its main commodity? Human eggs. Young women all over the world are solicited by ads--via college campus bulletin boards, social media, online classifieds--offering up to $100,000 for their "donated" eggs, to "help make someone's dream come true." But who is this egg donor? Is she treated justly? What are the short- and long-term risks to her health? The answers to these questions will disturb you . . . Produced by The Center for Bioethics and Culture (Lines That Divide, 2009), Eggsploitation spotlights the booming business of human eggs told through the tragic and revealing stories of real women who became involved and whose lives have been changed forever.
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