When a group of gangsters break into a mansion during a rainstorm, they quickly find themselves in a deadly game of cat and mouse with the residents.
The Gates is a TV show set in a seemingly peaceful suburban neighborhood. However, behind closed doors, the residents are hiding dark secrets. As a new police chief arrives, he soon discovers that the community is not as innocent as it seems. Vampires, werewolves, and other supernatural beings coexist with humans, leading to conflicts and dangerous situations.
Grumpy home-security expert Neil feuds with his neighbour Scott, who insists on keeping his Christmas lights illuminated all-year-round. Their tit-for-tat argument culminates in Neil triggering a power-cut across the entire street on Christmas Eve. But when the local crime family decide to rob every house on the street that night, and the pair must set aside their differences to defeat them.
In a post-apocalyptic future, a nomad scavenger discovers the remains of a destroyed robot in the desert. She brings it back to her apartment and soon realizes that the robot is a dangerous killing machine. As the robot goes on a rampage, she must find a way to survive and stop it before it's too late.
It Takes a Thief follows a reformed burglar who teams up with a host family to teach them about home security. With each episode, they demonstrate how burglars break into houses and provide tips to prevent burglaries. The show also explores the dynamic of the host family's relationships, bringing real-life drama to the series.
“The Intruder” is a 1970s color, PSA-style film that seeks to teach the viewer safety tricks for keeping their home safe from burglary and intruders. Produced by Julian Bercovici of Julian Films Production and directed by Bob Kelljan, this film is shot in and around residential areas of southern California and depicts various home invasion scenarios and safety methods such as alarms, locks, and general tips that are narrated by Noah Keen. Made in collaboration with the California Locksmiths Association and the Los Angeles, Burbank, and Glendale Police Departments, the film features interviews with police as well as a burglar himself.
A command center operator becomes increasingly obsessed with a single mother when he begins monitoring her life through his company's residential interior cameras.
Scenes illustrating assaults or assault attempts are shown, and advice on preventing or escaping from such incidents is given by Jeanne Bray, a policewoman and expert on marksmanship and personal safety.
An unassuming housewife in a 1950s suburbia holds a deeper secret waiting to be uncovered in a monstrous way when a burglar is revealed to be on the loose.
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