Dans une Allemagne dystopique aux mains d’un pouvoir autoritaire, une maison connectée se retourne contre son propriétaire... Un troublant thriller d’anticipation en forme de huis clos psychologique.
Lorsque Katharina Blum passe la nuit avec un terroriste présumé, sa vie calme et ordonnée vole en éclats. Devenue une suspecte, Katharina est l'objet d'une campagne de dénigrement menée par la police et un journaliste de tabloïd impitoyable, testant les limites de sa dignité et de sa santé mentale. Cette adaptation du roman de Heinrich Böll livre un commentaire incisif sur la puissance de l'État, la liberté individuelle et la manipulation médiatique, aussi pertinente aujourd'hui que le jour de sa sortie en 1975.
Belgrade, 2022: A photojournalist is threatened by right-wing extremist groups in her Serbian home and flees to Germany with her daughter. But then she also experiences increasing strong threats and attacks in her new home.
1512, dans un monde mis à feu et à sang sous le joug de l’oppresseur, un imprimeur décide de presser une lettre interdite qui pourrait mettre fin au pouvoir en place. Mais, découvert, il est arrêté et promis au bûcher. Son fils, Storm, qui a réussi à s’enfuir avec la lettre originale, est déclaré hors-la-loi et va subir une impitoyable chasse à l’homme organisé par le nouvel Inquisiteur. À qui pourra-t-il faire confiance dans un monde frappé par le fanatisme religieux ?
The campaign to free Julian Assange takes on intimate dimensions in this documentary portrait of an elderly man’s fight to save his son. Arguably the world’s most famous political prisoner, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is a figure pretty much everybody has an opinion about; perhaps more importantly, he serves as the emblem of an international arm wrestle over freedom of journalism, government corruption and unpunished war crimes. For his family members who face the prospect of losing him forever to the abyss of the US justice system, however, this David-and-Goliath struggle is personal – and, with his health declining in a British maximum-security prison and American government prosecutors pulling out all the stops to extradite him, the clock is ticking.
A New York gossip columnist feuds with a singer and enjoys the power of the press.
Tommy Robinson goes on the offensive by documenting how his own “hit piece” on his character was being constructed by the taxpayer-funded BBC for their popular investigative news special “Panorama.” In the film he manages to capture footage of the blackmailing of his former employees to invent stories, along with an organization—known as “Hope not Hate”—on set with the BBC, intimidating ex-employees of Robinson during interviews. The host of “Panorama” at the time of filming is caught on camera casually using racist and homophobic slurs during a £220 champagne lunch with the same ex-employee they had planned to coach for a fake interview in which the BBC would possibly edit in which to make it appear as, “a gender, a sexual thing against Tommy Robinson,” according to the host. Within 24 hours of releasing the film, social media giant Facebook made a public statement of their own and removed Tommy Robinson’s accounts permanently.
OBAIDA, a short film by Matthew Cassel, explores a Palestinian child’s experience of Israeli military arrest. Each year, some 700 Palestinian children undergo military detention in a system where ill-treatment is widespread and institutionalized. For these young detainees, few rights are guaranteed, even on paper. After release, the experience of detention continues to shape and mark former child prisoners’ path forward.
The story of a Kurdish newspaper whose journalists are under the constant threat of being abducted and killed by the state security forces.
Dans une Égypte redevenue dictature militaire, qui bafoue plus que jamais la liberté des femmes, Doaa el-Adl, dessinatrice de presse célèbre dans tout le monde arabe, revisite vingt ans de son combat par l'image.
This John Nesbitt's Passing Parade short tells the story of John Peter Zenger, who in Colonial New York was tried for sedition based on what he printed in his newspaper.
En 2008, Natasha, une femme nouvellement riche, décide d'ouvrir une chaîne de télévision indépendante (Dozhd) dans la Russie de Poutine et constitue une équipe ouverte d'esprit de parias prêts à exiger justice. En 2020, Natasha a tout perdu dans la guerre russe entre propagande et vérité, pour laquelle elle se bat sans relâche.
This MGM Passing Parade series short presents how separate events led to the creation of three provisions - freedom of speech, freedom of the press, and prohibition of the infliction of cruel and unusual punishments - in the U.S. Constitution's Bill of Rights.
In the 1990s, some newspapers were not allowed to enter the Diyarbakir region, under a state of emergency at that time, although they were legal. Children like Bawer and Hebûn, who were part of the distribution group, would secretly collect these newspapers from outside the city at a previously agreed location and take them to the planned meeting place in the city. There, the children changed their clothes and went out to distribute them, under the guise of other work. But they were constantly followed by those who saw the newspaper as dangerous and wanted to prevent its dissemination. Çerx is a testament to the conditions under which these newspapers were distributed to readers and the difficulties encountered.
En février 2018, l’assassinat du journaliste d’investigation Jan Kuciak et de sa compagne bouleverse la Slovaquie. Saisissant d’intensité, ce documentaire retrace l'enquête, qui a mis au jour une corruption systémique.
This film explores the evolution of propaganda and public relations in the United States, with an emphasis on the elitist theory of democracy and the relationship between war, propaganda and class. Includes original interviews with a number of dissident scholars including Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn, Michael Parenti, Peter Phillips (Project Censored), John Stauber (PR Watch), Christopher Simpson (The Science of Coercion) and others. A deep, richly illustrated study of the nature and history of propaganda, featuring some of the world’s most insightful critics, Psywar exposes the propaganda system, providing crucial background and insight into the control of information and thought.
Good Copy Bad Copy is a documentary about copyright and culture in the context of Internet, peer-to-peer file sharing and other technological advances.
On the 10th anniversary of his band Rall Tide’s debut album, artist Peter Kotas takes you on a flowering multimedia tour of Detroit musicians trying to survive in a world where you can’t even enjoy a baseball game without supporting The Bay of Pigs. Along the way he shows you how the band’s abrupt break-up led to his career as a political journalist peeking behind the curtains of Kansas to find diplomatic wizard Mike Pompeo, Trump’s CIA Director and Secretary of State, wears no clothes. Iowa Writer’s Workshop hero Kurt Vonnegut (or some entity that knows all about his life) hosts this documentary as the ideal human from his 1985 novel Galapagos: a penguin with flippers unable to pull triggers or press buttons to bomb and kill people.
Matthew Leung Ming-hong had been working as a breaking-news reporter for six years in Hong Kong but recently emigrated to the United Kingdom because of concerns about growing restrictions on journalists working in the city. Three Hong Kong media outlets popular with the opposition have folded in just six months, following the introduction of a controversial national security law in Hong Kong on June 30, 2020, raising fears about the future of press freedom in the city. The 29-year-old is starting a new life in Britain’s northern city of Manchester and plans to eventually resume his journalism career in Europe.