Follows a demonstration in 2017 at the city's former holdover facility: the Workhouse. It was sparked by a heatwave that sent temperatures inside the A/C-less jail into the 110s. In 2021, the Workhouse was closed after a long campaign against it, but this has left the equally notorious second jail, the Justice Center, to pick up the slack.
Breaking the Fourth Wall (or A Justice Center Recruitment Video) is a slog that seeks to keep up with the comical and particularly appalling management of the Justice Center, which has seen a scandalous amount of "disturbances," riots, hostage takings and full-on uprisings since 2020. As well as, 18 prisoner deaths in that time.
A documentary that explores the human dimension of hemodialysis, highlighting the experiences of patients and healthcare professionals within the Hospital Nacional de Clínicas in Córdoba, Argentina.
Two spirited Singaporean seniors in their late fifties trade years of conventional living for a lifetime of adventure as they hit the open road in a van, discovering newfound freedom, unexpected romance, and the joy of living life on their own terms.
Three murders 15 years apart, connected by one man. Families, detectives and forensic experts devoted their lives to exposing the truth, and bring a serial killer to justice.
Sensory Overload profiles individuals in the neurodivergent and neurosensitive communities and their allies, looking at how they are changing mindsets around them.
In August 2021, writer Lola Lafon spent a night alone in the Annex of the Anne Frank Museum, where the young girl and her family hid from 1942 to 1944. This experience gave rise to a book, Quand tu écouteras cette chanson, and now its documentary adaptation. Over the course of a night, the author revisits her story. An inner journey around the figure of Anne Frank and the power of writing in the face of oblivion.
Toby Hadoke presents a documentary focusing on the life and career of Malcolm Hulke — known affectionately as “Mac” — one of the key writers for Doctor Who during its classic era
The first TV documentary about pop art sensation Pauline Boty, tracking the artist’s original contribution to British art, her feminism and her unique take on the nascent celebrity culture of the 1960s. Ahead of her time in so many ways, Boty’s story ends with her tragic early death at 28 in 1966 and the subsequent revival of interest in her work in the last decade. Packed full of original photographs and art work, the film calls on an array of family, friends, art critics and famous fans to lead us through the Boty story. Contributors include pop art titan Sir Peter Blake, comedian and artist Jim Moir, critic Kate Bryan, best friend and print designer Natalie Gibson MBE, pop singers Corrine Drewery and Tanita Tikaram and TV presenter Ronnie Archer Morgan.