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- Since the rise to power of Hindu nationalists in 2014, India has been gradually moving away from democracy towards a regime where ethnic identity prevails. This transition is driven by Hindutva, a Hindu supremacist ideology embodied by Narendra Modi. For the past 10 years, Prime Minister Modi has relentlessly pursued his fascist policy based on Hindu supremacy. This ideology of hatred towards other religions in the country, particularly Islam, has also spread geopolitically around the world. Those who follow this belief want India to be only for Hindus, treating people of other religions, like Muslims or Sikhs as second-class citizens. Attacks against Christians have surged by 400% since Modi's election, accompanied by discriminatory laws targeting Muslims and widespread lynching incidents. Hindutva's influence permeates all levels of Indian society, leaving dissenters fearing reprisals and hesitant to speak out publicly. Furthermore, Hindutva serves Modi's interests on the international stage, resonating with other global nationalisms and fueling violent intercommunal conflicts extending to the United States and Europe. This documentary thus unveils a darker side of India, far from its portrayal as the world's largest democracy and Gandhi's dream of peace among communities.
- Three generations of an Iranian family, from the 1979 Islamic Revolution to today.
- Since announcing his candidacy, Donald Trump is everywhere. To him, it seems that nothing is taboo and no policy too outlandish to embrace. Somehow, this billionaire candidate has become the champion of ordinary America, with supporters travelling hundreds of miles just to see him.
- Dream's Gate is an observational documentary where Iranian female director Negin Ahmadi starts a personal journey into the combat zone of North Syria to question what it means to be a woman. Alone with her camera, she decides to look for an answer for her questions by encountering the women who embody the strongest contemporary myth of female strength and freedom: Kurdish female fighters. The personal search and internal struggles turn into an intimate women diary written in the first person. Following, sharing, witnessing the life of this other Kurdish women put into question the image that the director has of herself and of the cost of equality and freedom in this difficult region.
- In Europe, food manufacturers have signed responsibility pledges, promising no added sugar, preservatives, artificial colors or flavors and not to target children. So why are they using tactics banned in the West in the developing world?
- On April 6, 1994, Rwandan President Juvénal Habyarimana returned from a meeting in Tanzania aboard a Falcon 50 offered by François Mitterrand, the regime's closest ally. As the aircraft began its descent, two missiles pierced the darkness. The plane crashed into the gardens of the presidential residence. This attack immediately gave the signal. The genocide of the Tutsi minority had just begun. One million dead in three months. A far cry from the "African-style" inter-ethnic massacres presented by the Elysée Palace at the time to minimize the scale of the horror. This genocide had been planned for years, under the eyes of France, deaf to warnings.
- Brazil aims to build and sell an image of its society where sexuality is liberated and sexual orientation is highlighted and even respected. But it is also the most religious country in the world, and this same Brazil reveals itself as a very conservative country, resistant to dealing with sexuality issues. Every day a woman dies as a result of the prohibition on abortion and more than half of the murders of homosexuals and transsexuals in the world occurs in Brazil. Following the trail of Jandira, a young woman who lost her life after undergoing an illegal abortion, from the place of her disappearance to the political sphere, this film provides a critical look into the paradox of Brazilian sexuality and the rise of conservatism and religion, such as radical evangelism, which penetrates the government itself and bodes a dark future for women's and LGBT rights in the country.
- In 2018, Jair Bolsonaro, a right-wing populist candidate, was elected to lead Brazil. At the time, former President Lula was serving a prison sentence for corruption. But during the 2022 election, the two men clashed: cleared by the Supreme Court, Lula returned to the presidential race and was the favorite in the polls. Filmed for four months before the election, the first round of which takes place on October 2, this documentary analyzes the forces present and places the issue of the election in the high-tension context of the time.
- A community of dancers try to save the Municipal Theater of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil.
- It follows Jair Bolsonaro's career and his reputation while also showing him to be more complex than he is portrayed in this election year for Brazil.
- Christos is 12 years old. He is the last child of Arki, a small island located in the far east of Greece. Less than forty inhabitants live there all year round. For the last four years, the primary public school has remained open for one pupil only. Maria Tsialera, Christos's teacher, travels every week to Arki from the neighboring island where she lives to ensure his schooling, convinced that learning is essential for the development of this insular child. At the end of his primary school years, Christos might work with his parents and his older brothers in the family farm. But Maria Tsialera is doing whatever she can for him to continue his scholarship on another island.
- 2017– 32mTV Episode
- The diary of the exile of Elaha, a 14 year old Afghan girl, who films herself with a small camera to tell her story.
- 2017– 33mTV Episode