The documentary looks at the intimate, personal reasons individuals are drawn into that world and how some find their way out of it. The film also shows that Westerners embracing jihad is nothing new and has been going on since the 1980s.
Au travers d'images d'archives, Nicholson raconte l'histoire des véritables Warriors qui ont arpenté les rues de New York dans les années 1970 et la dure réalité de la vie des gangs dans une ville qui semblait s'effondrer.
The conflict in the Democratic Republic of the Congo has cost more lives than any other since World War II. In November 2012, the M23 rebellion drove the Congolese Army out of the Eastern city of Goma. Government soldiers retreated to Minova, where they systematically raped hundreds of their own civilians. The atrocity drew international outrage, the global community promising intervention. The documentary chronicles the largest rape trial in Congo's history, offering an unprecedented glimpse into the lives of its women and the unshakable strength of the human spirit.
My Brother the Serial Killer chronicles the background of Rogers and looks into prior assertions that he had murdered over 70 people. As it investigates claims by the Rogers family that Glen Rogers was behind the Goldman-Simpson murders, the documentary includes a filmed interview of Glen's brother Clay, wherein Clay asserts that his brother confessed his involvement. Rogers' family stated that he had informed them that he had been working for Nicole in 1994 and that he had made verbal threats about her to them. Rogers would later speak to a criminal profiler about the Goldman-Simpson murders, providing details about the crime and remarking that he had been hired by O. J. Simpson to steal a pair of earrings and potentially murder Nicole.
On 18 February 1983, from 9:00 am to 3:00 pm, more than 2000 Muslims were killed in the town of Nellie and its surrounding villages in Assam, India. People’s homes were burnt down and their fields destroyed. Most of those who died were old people, women and children. Till date the Nellie massacre, remains on the margins of India’s public history, and is virtually wiped out from the nation’s collective memory.
La vie quotidienne à l'institut de Police de Nicolet ou comment on fabrique en série les défenseurs du pouvoir. " Le vidéo, un outil de pauvre. Mais un outil. Un outil de communication. Un outil de lutte simple et efficace. Malgré tout. " (Pierre Falardeau, 1975). / L'apprentissage du métier de policier à l'Institut de police de Nicolet est montré dans ses différentes étapes où s'expriment des attitudes conformistes et des gestes conditionnés. La caméra varie les prises de vues et les plans insistent sur la rigidité morale et physique de cet embrigadement qui incarne à la fois l'aliénation et la perte d'autonomie de l'individu.
Whose Streets ? est un regard impitoyable sur la façon dont le meurtre de Mike Brown, âgé de 18 ans, a incité une communauté à riposter et a déclenché un mouvement mondial.