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1-8 of 8
- In 1916, the 1st Australian Tunnelling Company is tunneling beneath German fortifications and bunkers to detonate massive explosive charges.
- Steve-o stars in this award-winning series with your host Terry Does a thing. He's gonna twist himself till it hurts and then, he'll punch you instead. And maybe, just maybe.. He'll Do a belly laugh in the process Ah ahh ahhhaaahaahaha
- A Kosova Australian Boy, Selmon Beha, is beckoned back to Kosova for his brother's arranged Muslim wedding. What has happened to that war-torn country since Selmon was last there, 16 years ago? Have Selmon's parents returned to Kosova to feel more comfortable with their Muslim faith, at a time when more and more international hysteria is building against Islam? Selmon arrives with his Australian non-Muslim girlfriend. Should he return to Australia after the wedding? An easy question at first glance, but then again Selmon is a Muslim and that's not an easy thing to be in Australia at the moment.
- As screened on Foxtel's The History Channel, here is the moving dramatisation of The Western Front diaries, the landmark book written by Jonathan King to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the end of the First World War. Now direct from the battlefields he presents this exciting story of how tough-fighting Australians helped win the war. Using brutally honest and extraordinary eyewitness accounts, this dramatic story comes straight from soldiers who actually fought in those bloody trenches. Narrated by Jack Thompson.
- In the middle of Indonesia, the most populous Muslim nation on earth, there is a tiny island where the people are almost all Hindu. The island is Bali, and the Balinese share their daily lives with legendary Hindu gods and heroes who have walked and danced on the island for a thousand years. Over the last thirty years another group of legendary figures has captured their imagination, dancing on water. 25 years ago Bill Leimbach made a documentary called Balinese Surfer, about the first foreign surfers to arrive in Bali. They left more than their boards behind. They left a legacy, which has become an industry and to some, even a fortune. That early film portrayed how the first Balinese copied these Australian and American surfers and broke through the age-old taboos that said the sea was the home of demons and evil spirits. The sequel Waves of Change, revisits those original Balinese boys to see what has happened in their lives, to their island and to the sport of surfing itself. All the original surfers have had fascinating careers and personal developments. One has become a Hindu priest, two have become surf wear millionaires, while another works for Qantas Bali Tours. Waves of Change follows the old boys as they use the glamour of the young generation of national surfing stars to bring media attention to some of the environmental issues they face today - plastic, pollution, sewerage run-off into the surf and reef bombing. The new film follows both generations as they build their Wave of Change Organisation and its first team of athletic ambassadors.