The film follows Seth Blum, a high-school math teacher, Andy Horwitz, a blogger and performer, and Christopher X. Brodeur, a political gadfly, as they attempt to collect petitions, get on the ballot, raise money and generally navigate the 2005 New York City mayor’s race. They prowl the streets for signatures, crash debates and get arrested for allegedly threatening journalists.
The film starts with events that led to the overthrow of Slobodan Milošević on 5 October 2000. It analyzes the National Endowment for Democracy's financing of the Otpor! resistance movement, together with the West's training of Serbian activists and politicians in Budapest and discusses the row between the government and the opposition concerning electoral fraud accusations. The film continues to assess Serbia's economy after the fall of Milošević.
Part 1: Pride and Genocide deals with the carnage and its immediate aftermath. It examines the patterns of pre-planned genocidal violence (by right-wing Hindutva cadres), which many claim was state-supported, if not state-sponsored. The film reconstructs through eyewitness accounts the attack on Gulbarg and Patiya (Ahmedabad) and acts of barbaric violence against Moslem women at Eral and Delol/Kalol (Panchmahals) even as Chief Minister Modi traverses the state on his Gaurav Yatra
Filmmakers James Hanlon and the Naudet brothers were originally filming Tony Benetatos, a probationary firefighter of the New York City Fire Department assigned to the Engine 7/Ladder 1/Battalion 1 Firehouse on Duane Street in Lower Manhattan with the intention of making a film about the "probie's" first experience as a firefighter. On the morning of September 11, the firehouse, under the direction of Battalion Chief Joseph Pfeifer, was called out on a reported "odor of gas" at Church and Lispenard Streets. Jules rode with Pfeifer to investigate, while Gedeon stayed behind at the firehouse with the "probie.
Du manifeste fondateur de Pierre-Joseph Proudhon en 1840 (Qu'est-ce que la propriété ?) à la chute de Barcelone en 1939, Tancrède Ramonet retrace, en images, un siècle d’histoire mondiale du mouvement anarchiste, du collectivisme libertaire à l'anarcho-syndicalisme, en passant par la propagande par le fait.
Un documentaire sur les troubles en Ukraine en 2013 et 2014, alors que les manifestations soutenant l'intégration européenne se sont transformées en une révolution violente appelant à la démission du président Viktor F. Ianoukovitch.
Ce film documentaire donne la parole à sept enfants juifs et palestiniens, âgés entre 9 et 13 ans. Ils donnent leur vision sur le conflit israélo-palestinien.