The Triangle is a suspenseful TV mini-series that follows a group of scientists and a tabloid journalist as they embark on a dangerous journey to uncover the mysteries of the Bermuda Triangle. As they delve deeper into the unknown, they encounter strange phenomena such as rapid aging, alternate realities, and time travel. The plot explores themes of survival, guilt, and the consequences of making tough decisions.
In 1988, a reporter and his ex-girlfriend team up with a group of diverse individuals, including Greenpeace activists and Inupiaq Eskimos, to save a family of gray whales trapped by rapidly forming ice in the Arctic Circle.
Cowspiracy: The Sustainability Secret is a documentary that reveals the alarming environmental impact of the meat and dairy industry. The film explores the conspiracy of silence surrounding animal agriculture and its devastating effects on the planet. It exposes the truth about deforestation, water scarcity, greenhouse gas emissions, and other issues linked to the production of meat and dairy products. Through interviews with experts and activists, Cowspiracy sheds light on the urgent need for a sustainable and plant-based food system.
The story of a daring protest in 2013 on a Russian oil rig that goes terrifyingly wrong as Putin defends his oil at all costs. Shots are fired, and the protesters are thrown into a Russian jail.
1985: Greenpeace ship Rainbow Warrior is bombed. The attack exposed a murky world of nuclear testing and abuse of power - and inspired a generation of environmental activists.
Angry Inuk is a thought-provoking documentary that sheds light on the impact of the fur trade on Inuit communities in Nunavut. It explores the ongoing struggle faced by the Inuit people as they fight for their traditional way of life and challenge the negative portrayal of seal hunting by organizations like Greenpeace. The film raises important questions about human rights, globalization, and the rights of indigenous communities in the Arctic Polar Circle region.
How to Change the World is a documentary film that follows the journey of a group of activists who came together to form Greenpeace, a global environmental organization. The film explores their mission to protect the environment and their success in raising awareness about environmental issues.
Climate Hustle reveals the history of climate scares, examines the science on both sides of the debate, digs into the politics and media hype surrounding the issue, shows how global warming has become a new religion for alarmists, and explains the impacts the warming agenda will have on people in America and around the world.
Black Ice is a documentary that exposes the perilous journeys and courageous efforts of environmental activists in their fight to protect the Arctic from exploitation and climate change. It highlights the harsh conditions they face and the urgent need for action to preserve the fragile Arctic ecosystem.
In June 2010, French actress Marion Cotillard spent a week in the heart of the tropical forests of the Democratic Republic of Congo with members of Greenpeace France and Greenpeace Africa. She delivers in video a strong testimony on the looting of Congolese forests which benefits a few industrial groups, often European.
Peter Wilcox, as skipper of the 'Rainbow Warrior', a Greenpeace ship, docks in Auckland, July 1985, preparing for a protest against French nuclear testing in the south pacific. When a bomb rips open the vessel, killing a crew member, he must convince the police superintendent that this is an act of terrorism. Determined not to allow outside forces to threaten their harbor, the police embark on a pursuit of the persons responsible. The events that follow nearly bring down an allied nation's government.
After getting kicked in the head, Redmond ends up tangled in a web of crime, love, and self-discovery.
The film follows the first Greenpeace expedition to the Antarctic on board of the Ross Sea. The film is also about the attempts of the industrialized nations to parcel out the 'last continent'.
Just when he's beginning to take his perfect life and marriage for granted, John (Timothy Hutton) discovers that he's the result of a failed government experiment to spawn a race of perfect assassins. But the closer he gets to finding out what went wrong, the weirder the truth becomes.
A disaster-movie made in Germany.
This documentary reveals the shocking truth behind Secret Project 4 1, a classified government experiment in the South Pacific that caused environmental destruction, radiation sickness, and forced relocation of indigenous people.
Jia Zhangke's short film for Greenpeace East Asia depicts the effects of air pollution in northeast China, a region frequently blanketed in dangerous levels of air pollution. 'Smog Journeys' traces two families from two different backgrounds; one a mining family in Hebei province, and the other a trendy middle class family in Beijing. Both face a similar fate. Air pollution is one of China's most pressing environmental and health issues. Greenpeace calls for a shift from coal to clean renewable energy, as well as short term measures that better safeguard people's health.
Blowing Up Paradise is a documentary that explores the French nuclear testing in French Polynesia. It delves into the environmental and political impact of these tests and the resistance and activism by groups like Greenpeace.
In this documentary, filmmakers Daniel B. Gold and Judith Helfand (Blue Vinyl) follow a troupe of self-proclaimed global warming "warriors" on a mission to get the world to care about rising temperatures and melting polar ice caps. Taking a topic that's inherently serious and applying their signature blend of humor and emotional heft, Gold and Helfand advance the environmental dialogue in a surprisingly entertaining way.