Watch the Film on Bin laden in Channel 4 on Bin Laden and his death.
A stellar cast of White House insiders speak on camera about the operation to find and kill Osama Bin Laden, including the first – and extraordinary – documentary interview with President Barack Obama on the subject.
From the anxiety-drenched minutes in the White House Situation Room to the deadly stairwells of Bin Laden’s secret labyrinth, cinematic dramatisations take viewers deep inside one of the most important moments of our era, showing the US Navy Seals coming face to face with the most wanted man in history.
Based on high-level CIA and White House briefings, and packed with exclusive stories and fresh insights, the film reveals that President Obama received a downbeat last-minute intelligence assessment, which caused many of his senior advisors to turn against the operation.
The film is not available online in India in Channel 4 .
It’s not just the tunes, it’s Marley’s subtle charisma that sells this film. His impact on the world was bigger than music alone and in this film we see a clear reflection of the good and bad sides.
In true style this mindf*ck of a doc explores all the conspiracy theories behind Kubrick’s The Shining– the director, as we all know of course, behind the footage of the moon landing…
In Chile‘s Atacama Desert astronomers search the desert sky for the meaning of the universe. But while they look up others look down. Every day a group of determined women sift through these same sands trying to find what is left of their loved ones, the men killed, burned and dumped right there by Pinochet‘s regime.
Close contenders:
Yeah, sorry about this, but as we said, we thought we’d smuggle in a couple more not-to-miss names…
Director Alison Klayman followed the controversial Chinese artist and together with her subject created a fantastic film that says nothing less than “F*ck you China”.
Climate change without Greenpeace and other lentil-eaters. Instead, Jon Shenk‘s doc profiles the now ousted President Mohamed Nasheed of the Maldives, a man with balls of steel who confronts a problem greater than any other world leader ever has.
If you ever get a daughter who dares say the phrase “I want to be a model,” this is the film to stick on. It details how the brutal modelling industry grooms vulnerable young Russian girls to work in Japan. Don’t expect sexy poses and pouting lips but think more in the lines of depression and exploitation.
An unstoppable volunteer coach with a no-nonsense attitude is in charge of one of the most unruly sets of high school football players ever. The team has one chance to transform their luck, and with it their future, but will they take it? Aside from personal struggles, victories and losses, this Oscar-winner shows what happens to youth when there are no jobs or future prospects in sight and could easily have been set in Tottenham instead of Memphis.
As The Wire’s David Simon says in the film: “The drug war is a holocaust in slow motion,” and after seeing this film you can’t deny this fact. Is the war on drugs really working? No. So why are we continuing with it?
Kick-ass music, a fantastic narrative and a succession of unexpected events. Director Malik Bendjelloul struck gold with this search-for-the-truth story behind the mysterious disappearance of Detroit-based singer/songwriter Rodriguez, whose songs – without him ever knowing it – became the voice of the anti-Apartheid movement in South Africa.
Hearing aids and incontinence pants are not necessarily what you would think of when hearing this title but this doc is about nothing less than a group of old-age pensioners who decided to tour the world playing competitively. Thought old age equals twinkly and lovely? These players would mess with their competitor’s pacemaker if it gave them a better chance of winning.
Sundance called it “by far the coolest film ever shown at the festival”. And it’s true; Shut Up and Play the Hits, about the last days of LCD Soundsystem, is far more than a concert registration of one of the greatest bands that ever was. It’s a feast of music, visuals and the human side of fame. Plus you can learn the art of being uber-cool from the very likeable lead singer James Murphy.
One of the highest grossing docs of the year, and if you’ve seen this trailer you’ll understand why. Thought you knew the odd sicko? Well, you haven’t met Frédéric Bourdin yet.
Washington Post‘s Reporter ,after finalising a house,meets with an accident along with his wife.
The seriously injured wife dies in the Hospital.
At the Hospital, he comes across a note-book with strange doodles by his wife.
He decides to take some days off and drives away.
After a couple of hours his car is stuck and he knocks on the doors of a house.
When he comes to know where he has landed, he is bewildered for he could not have travelled that distance between the time he left and his arrival at the city.
The house owner comes with his gun ready to shoot the reporter saying that he had been knocking at the door for the past couple of Days.
The local police woman saves him.
Later he comes to know from the woman that the city has been witnessing strange things and behaviour from its residents.
She also tells him she has been having a vivid dream that she was dying by drowning , some how she remains alive and numbers are whispered in her ears.
In the meanwhile the man whom he met tells the reporter that he has been hearing voices of a disaster from his wash basin sink.
He also suffers from the same ailment which the reporter’s wife was diagnosed with before her death.
The man dies mysteriously.
The reporter hears voices on the telephone.
How these things end is the story.
The Story is reported to be based on facts.
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On Nov. 15, 1966, two young couples from Point Pleasant, Roger and Linda Scarberry, and Steve and Mary Mallette told police they saw a large white creature whose eyes “glowed red” when the car headlights picked it up. They described it as a “flying man with ten foot wings” following their car while they were driving in an area of town known as ‘the TNT area‘, the site of a former World War II munitions plant.[5][6]
During the next few days, other people reported similar sightings. Two volunteer firemen who sighted it said it was a “large bird with red eyes”. Mason County Sheriff George Johnson commented that he believed the sightings were due to an unusually large heron he termed a “shitepoke”. Contractor Newell Partridge told Johnson that when he aimed a flashlight at a creature in a nearby field its eyes glowed “like bicycle reflectors”, and blamed buzzing noises from his television set and the disappearance of his German Shepherd dog on the creature.[7] Wildlife biologist Dr. Robert L. Smith at West Virginia University told reporters that descriptions and sightings all fit the Sandhill Crane, a large American crane almost as high as a man with a seven foot wingspan featuring circles of reddish coloring around the eyes, and that the bird may have wandered out of its migration route.
There were no Mothman reports in the immediate aftermath of the December 15, 1967 collapse of the Silver Bridge and the death of 46 people, giving rise to legends that the Mothman sightings and the bridge collapse were connected”
In reality, 46 people died in the collapse of the Silver Bridge, not 36. Also, the film’s claim at the end credits of the collapse of the Silver Bridge never being explained is incorrect; the incident was found to be caused by the failure of an eye-bar in a suspension chain.[6]
The film is devoid of melodrama and is quite engaging.
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