ZAAD tells the autobiographical story of Dries Meddens. After the death of his mother, the care for Dries' bipolar father falls on his plate. He discovers how crudely and ruthlessly society and psychiatry treat patients. His father eventually dies in solitary confinement. While emptying his parent’s home, Dries discovers an old letter from his grandfather. The man appears to have led a busy, productive life. He is the founder of an internationally renowned seed breeding company and still has time to paint, write diaries and conduct intensive correspondence. Dries finds similarities between his grandfather, his father and himself. Slowly the fear grows that his father's psychiatric illness might be hereditary. Strolling through the family’s film and photo archives, with dramatic and sometimes hilarious finds, Dries tries to find answers. He also consults a psychiatrist. Together the consultations and reviewing of his archival material help Dries look at bipolarity with new eyes.
Tractor Ted joins Farmer Tom who has gone to his friend’s farm to help milk the sheep! Did you know you can get milk from sheep (ewes)? Les has a terrible time trying to keep the sheep still to check its feet and cheeky Midge races about seeing if the sheep can catch her.
Farmer Tom and Les are busy mending the fencing on the farm but where do the fence posts come from Tractor Ted wonders. He goes off to find out and discovers a gigantic machine that cuts and chops down the trees.
Find out how silage is made on the farm. Meet Tractor Ted and Farmer Tom as they see tractors and forage harvesters hard at work in the fields cutting, raking and collecting the grass. The children and Midge the dog tease Les when they hide in the long grass. Poor Les!
Where do eggs come from? Do you know? Chickens!!! Tractor Ted is off to the farm to see them with his friends Farmer Tom and Midge the dog. Sing along as Farmer Tom fills up the hopper with food for the chickens and watch with Tractor Ted as the farmer checks the engine on the huge tractor with caterpillar tracks. Tractor Ted has fun spinning around in the field with it too! At the end of the day Tractor Ted and Midge tell the children all about it and see the eggs that they have been busy painting.
Join Farmer Tom and Midge to find out where carrots come from. See where they grow and how they're harvested. Plus, see the very big machine that chops off the leaves as the carrots come out of the ground.
After his parents go missing, Ryan returns home where the mysterious reappearance of his high school girlfriend initiates a series of increasingly mind bending events which eventually reveal the shocking truth of his childhood.
Isaire is a man worn down by a monotonous life filled with humiliations. One day, a mysterious customer leaves a strange stopwatch on the counter. Isaire discovers he can stop time. Initially intoxicated by this freedom, he quickly descends into abuse: theft, manipulation, a sense of omnipotence. This dizzying experience distorts him and leads him to violence. When control slips from his grasp, he is confronted with what he has become — and there is no escape.
Karol G is gifting fans with a new TV special called La Premiere, just in time for the holiday season. Produced by Bichota Films, this one-hour special offers audiences exclusive performances of songs from the album, new adaptations, unique versions, and multiple special appearances by artists and notable personalities. Filmed in multiple locations across Mexico City, Los Angeles, Cartagena, and Medellín, “La Premiere” is a visual and sonic celebration that elevates “Tropicoqueta” to a new dimension.
In the early 2000s, Olive Sherman was on top of the world. As the it-girl of the nineties, she had millions of dollars, worldwide adoration, and a whirlwind romance and subsequent fairytale marriage to actor Ryan Keats.
This short film follows a teen girl who finds her parents old love letters. She reads through them as they tell the ups and downs of her parents relationship.
The Hundred Squares: "No more delays," the cry of citizens echoes from the lives of those barely holding out against discrimination and hatred. Struggling with diverse identities in their daily lives, citizens reflect on the meaning of "discrimination" through their own experiences and testimonies. They question and reflect on what is needed to eliminate it and speak out before the camera. The Blooming Equalities: discrimination law that has been on hold for 20 years. A lawyer, a researcher, a religious figure, a writer, and an activist stand in the square again after a year, and, in this time of rampant right-wing extremism and hate, they speak of an anti-discrimination law as "the right answer to ending the insurrection, the last line of defense for human dignity, a current that can no longer be held back, a square that cannot at all harm families, churches, and the nation, and a place where the voices of the less fortunate can be heard."