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1-50 of 149
- Nicolas le Floch, doubly a comissaire with the King's Police and the Marquis de Ranreuil, solves crimes during the reign of Louis XV.
- 18-year-old Laetitia disappears, her overturned scooter found in front of her house early one morning. While police are certain they've arrested the suspect, they still haven't found Laetitia's body.
- Present-day France. The first presidential candidate of Algerian descent is on the brink of power. But on the night of the election, he is shot, bringing turmoil to two families and the entire nation.
- In 1813, Capitaine Jacques St. Ives, a Hussar in the Napoleonic wars, is captured and sent to a Scottish prison camp. He's a swashbuckler, so the prison's commander, Major Farquar Bolingbroke Chevening, asks for lessons in communicating with women. Both men have their eyes on the lovely Flora, who resides with her aunt, the iconoclastic and well-traveled Miss Susan Emily Gilcrist. By chance, living close to the camp is Jacques's grandfather and brother, whom Jacques believes died years before. Jacques decides to escape, find his relatives, and win the hand of Flora; Major Chevening and an unforeseen enemy stand in his way. Can Miss Gilcrist contrive to make everything work out?
- Vincent Verner is a former cop who was fired from the police force for refusing to turn a blind eye to an investigation involving a powerful man. A young prosecutor comes to get him to join a new group in charge of investigating ''delicate'' cases, those that no one dares to summon: men and women of power, politics, finance, the media, the star system, lobbies, consortiums, and the bosses of large companies. Verner, a maverick with an aversion to lying, will apply his own methods.
- Philippe, a concert pianist, has a breakdown during a recital. Afterwards, his brother, whom he believed had died in childhood, appears and claims to be him. Is Philippe losing his mind or is there a conspiracy against him?
- Paul Vilar, a former officer in the Special Forces, is a specialist in survival and extreme sports. Separated from his wife, he hopes to get closer to his 17-year-old daughter, Sarah, while hiking in the mountains. However, things are not going to work out as he had planned.
- A charred body is found in Brocéliande Forest with a shocked and speechless 13-year-old boy next to it. What is he doing there? How is he involved? Two gendarmes and an unconventional child psychiatrist try to clear up the mystery.
- A group of friends who have known each other for many years gather at Max and Lucie's house to celebrate Lucie's birthday. When they arrive, the three guests discover Max kneeling before the corpse of his wife.
- Christophe Perrin, a renowned oyster farmer in Arcachon Bay, is the victim of a murder attempt. His three daughters rush to his bedside, where he lies wounded and unable to manage L'Héritage, the family oyster farm.
- A man moves with his family in a new apartment and starts to feel a strange presence around him. Is he mad or is there really something ?
- Michale is a thirty year old woman. She works with her father in a Tel Aviv accounting office providing services to important religious institutions. She divides her time between her child, her husband, her work and the man with whom she is having an affair. When Michale learns of the tragic death of her lover, her life is shattered
- The writer Louis Gardel remembers his youth in Algerie.In 1955 Louis is 15 years old and he lives with his grandmother Zoe.Zoe is friend with the president Steiger, leader of the French settlers but also with the old Arab Bouarab.One night looking at the Bay of Algiers Louis is convinced that the world in which he has grown will disappear.The first events of the war of independence have began.The young boys and young girls have a good time at the seaside:swimming, dancing, flirting.But little by little the war becomes part of their daily life.
- This is the story of a world whose territories and own frontiers were built by the slave trade. A world where violence, subjugation and profit imposed their routes.
- Written in an invented language, "nasdat", a slang English hybridized with Russian words, "A Clockwork Orange" caused a double shockwave in the last century: when it was published in 1962, then in 1971, when it was adapted for the screen by Stanley Kubrick. Accused of glorifying violence, echoing the criminal acts that had claimed his work as their own, the deeply wounded British writer set out his concerns about the world in the making in an autobiographical manuscript, "The Clockwork Condition". In it, he sets out the humanist vision that inspired this dystopian universe, where the nihilistic violence of hopeless youth collides with a power determined to control beings through conditioning, using all-powerful technologies.
- The documentary of the Nuremberg War Trials of 21 Nazi dignitaries held after World War II.
- Tells the story of the wonderful and long-lasting friendship between Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg and William Burroughs that gave birth to the Beat Generation movement.
- What remains, thirty years on, of the memory of a mother left too soon?
- Details the relationship of Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, and highlights the place that the couple and Casa Azul took in the days of Communists fleeing to Mexico. Leon Trotsky's exile to Mexico City and Casa Azul affected the couple and their circle. Rare footage of Frida, Diego, Trotsky, and stock footage of Casa Azul and the couple's shared home are mixed to delight fans of art and Frida.
- Marie's life as recounted by her mother Nadine. Born into a filmmaker family, Marie debuted as a teenager, enchanting film community and audiences, and was a celebrated star when she separated from her violent lover and disaster struck.