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1-27 of 27
- The epic tale of a class struggle in twentieth-century Italy as seen through the eyes of two childhood friends on opposing sides.
- A priceless tablet of Gilgamesh, the oldest and most important work of literature is stolen from a Museum. A security guard vows to do whatever it takes to get it back from a group of smugglers. Along the way, he face his own inner demons.
- The chaotic workings of a hospital with staff on strike.
- The early years of Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels and Jenny Marx, between Paris, Brussels and London.
- A documentary on China, concentrating mainly on the faces of the people, filmed in the areas they were allowed to visit. The 220-minute version consists of three parts. The first part, taken around Beijing, includes a cotton factory, older sections of the city, and a clinic where a Caesarean operation is performed using acupuncture. The middle part visits the Red Flag canal and a collective farm in Henan, as well as the old city of Suzhou. The final part shows the port and industries of Shanghai and ends with a stage presentation by Chinese acrobats.
- Henry opens his life to a woman and a damaged boy. As they move closer the past pulls them apart.
- The Leader centers on the life of German thinker Karl Marx, focusing on his political and economic theories, his romance with Jenny von Westphalen, and his friendship with Friedrich Engels.
- Director Alexander Kluge provides his own take of Eisenstein's unfinished filming of Karl Marx's Capital, a subject that the Russian director and James Joyce had debated in 1927.
- Burnt out and suffering from a mid life crisis, the eccentric Natsuki Aso decides to take an emergency once-in-a-lifetime trip to Europe. Surprisingly, not everything goes according to plan.
- History of the period in the life of Marx and Engels passed between 1848 and 1849, including the publication of the Communist Manifesto, the French democratic revolution of 1848, the militancy and expulsion of Marx from Belgium and Germany, to finally settle with his family in London and collaborate with Engels in the edition of the New Renan Gazette.
- St. Agnes Academy has a new principal, Father Benet, and a classroom of ten-year-olds that includes Sister Mary Gilbert, straight-A-student Mary Brown, and a precocious scholarship boy, Henry Harvin. Students report on their heroes: Mary's is Jesus Christ, whose middle initial she says is "H" - their former principal, an aging nun whose picture is on the wall, told her so. Henry's hero is Karl Marx. Sister Gilbert sends Harry to see the principal. He walks past moms gathered for a PTA meeting, chats with Ms. White, the school's secretary, and enters Fr. Benet's office for punishment. Father takes out a varnished paddle with holes in the blade. Who will get his comeuppance?
- California 2004. The war, George Bush's re-election. Whatever happened to the grandchildren of the 'Marx and Coca-cola generation'?
- Shows how the money collected from the first Crusade for Freedom in 1950 led to the establishment of Radio Free Europe the following year. Scenes recreated by Hollywood actors portray a Cold War version of communist tyranny.
- Brussels, January 1848, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels are writing the draft of the Communist Manifesto. A young woman, Marianne, rushes in, blaming Karl for forgetting her birthday celebration.
- It is the year 3032AD and the United Earth Systems have been alerted to illegal worm-hole activities occurring on the Asteroid mining colony, Palermus IV.
- Mr. Bam is a goofy, walking catastrophe - one who bears a resemblance to President Barack Obama. When encountering a homeless on the street asking for "change" Mr. Bam, upon realizing he has no cash of his own, sets off to redistribute the wealth of the more prosperous to help this man out - by any means necessary.
- 2011– 1h 5mTV Episode
- 1982–6.4 (7)TV EpisodeVictorian England ruled a quarter of the globe, an unprecedented empire, thanks to unprecedented progress in science and technology. Yet the carnage of the Great War wrecked all Europe, clearing the path for the US to rise to prominence, achieved after the even worse Second World War. Karl Marx lead a measly life, but his writings changed world history in a way he himself hoped never would happen. The Soviet Union, with Stalinist terror on Hitlerian scale, became America's challenger in the Cold War, the end of which came as a blissful surprise, freedom having become the stake. Communist party rule survives in China, albeit in a virtually capitalist form.
- The Industrial Revolution changed the way Humankind observed the world. At this time, a new generation of philosophers began to challenge theories put forth by history's philosophers, challenging the boundaries of understanding and reason.