An exploration of two souls inhabiting bodies from 1940's Hungary, and the beginning of the digital age.
Shots of races at a military athletic meeting.
Short war movie
Documentary of prisoner exchange during WWI.
Director of the movie recites his revolutionary manifesto poem on the backdrop of a montage.
During this time of war, Canadian men are battling on the front. But the chain of command and information about what happens on the battlefield is often a two-way communication between the front and the authorities back in Canada. It is in many of those at home functions that women can play an important role in the war effort, they in military functions members of the Canadian Women's Army Corps.
A Civil War Veteran is caught up back with the past and must run from it to survive
A boy reaching manhood, in his 20s starts writing a letter seeing how violent, cruel and unjust the place he lives in has become. He gives a vivid detail of the times and addresses the issue he and many others are facing. He is starting a revolution. And though he talks about peace in the letter he concludes by saying that he will be choosing the violent way as that was his destiny. The letter was to Gandhi.
They could not look indifferently at the bloody wounds of Ukraine, did not stand aside when the Ukrainian East fell into darkness. The story of those who became a symbol of the war for independence.
Brigadier General Stanley M. Ulanoff, a widely decorated military historian who served with the Counterintelligence Corps in Europe during World War II, introduces this gripping documentary film. At 7:55 AM on Sunday, December 7th, 1941, which FDR called "a date which will live in infamy," the Japanese began an air attack that devastated the Pacific fleet and took the lives of 2,343 servicemen. Lt. Cmdr. John Ford skillfully blends historic action with studio shots in this Oscar-winning look at the day's events. Also included is The Fleet That Came to Stay, concerning the invasion of Okinawa.
Based on a true story, 'God Is The Greatest' is a short film about hope, humanity, and loss. Focusing on a brief moment in a complicated conflict, the film depicts how the lives of ordinary people are being unraveled on the periphery of the brutal civil war in Syria.
Who said I had forgotten?
The authentic cinematic documentary was filmed by Alexander Zhekov at the front during the military conflict of 1912–1913. This is the earliest film entirely created by a Bulgarian author and one of the few works in the world that fully reflect a military conflict of that time.