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1-17 of 17
- Famed 18th-century English highwayman Dick Turpin eludes authorities while romancing a farmer's daughter, though his days robbing coaches under the alias John Palmer may be numbered.
- Young French people of Malian origin are preparing for a six-week stay in Mali, including a month in the village of their grandparents, so that these teenagers from suburban housing projects can rediscover the meaning of their roots.
- Gabonese botanist Édouard Mintsa has a legit day job, but he's a traditional healer in his spare time. "Everything is sick. A car that has transported a corpse is sick," he says. For him, the forest is a sacred space and a river is purity.
- Taking the pretext of a sport, here rugby, this program leads the viewer to look at societies or human groups for whom the collective game goes beyond just playing rugby, or any other team sport.
- At the Sixth Session of the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, in 2007 in New York, a delegation from West Papua, led by human rights activist Viktor Kaisiëpo, arose to claim the autonomy of their province from Indonesia.
- For Venezuelan musician and bassist Oscar D'León, salsa is like second nature. That's why he is affectionately nicknamed The Pharaoh of Salsa. He shows us his real self with brilliance during his July 13, 2010, concert at the Zénith Paris.
- The "magyal" is, in Yemen, a daily gathering where friends chew the "kât" together, talking and listening to music or poetry. A musician is showing us his instrument, the ancient lute, which can only be found now in Yemen and in the Comoros; the "qanbus" or "Sana Oeûd", at the harmony table which has been covered with goat skin. The singer can enhance his lyric poetry by hitting out a crystal-like sound from a copper tray. In the Yemeni society music can't be separated from poetry. The words of the song must be fully understood to feel the emotion conveyed by the singer. The Bedouin clarinet player is playing a last tune on views of the towered-houses of the old town of Sana. Silence takes over when dawn gradually switches from darkness to daylight. Then profane music is replaced by the muezzins' sacred music, their voices echoing each other from one minaret to another.
- The challenge of New Caledonia today lies in the ability of its local youth to desire, and build, a common future between all the diverse communities of these French overseas territories and archipelagos.
- 2007– 52mTV EpisodeThe challenge of New Caledonia today lies in the ability of its local youth to desire, and build, a common future between all the diverse communities of these French overseas territories and archipelagos.
- In the north of Kerala, in the micro-state of Kannur in the southwest of India, an ancestral ritual called Teyyam is played out, during which men embody the gods. This film tells the story of a family of untouchables, servants of the gods.