Filmu televīzijas kanāls , kurā tiek piedāvāti dažādi holivudas hīti, eiropas kino un populārie seriāli.
Father's Little Dividend (Father's Little Dividend)
Father of the bride faces becoming a grandfather.
Swept Away (Swept Away)
Paris. She's English, he's French. A rendezvous in a tea room. But there's more to the story.
And Then There Were None (And Then There Were None)
Seven guests, a newly hired personal secretary and two staff are gathered for a weekend on an isolated island by the hosts the Owens who are delayed. At dinner a record is played and the host's message alleges that all the people present are guilty of murder and suddenly the first of them is dead, then the next - It seems that one of them is the murderer but the leading person is always the person who is murdered next and at last only two people are left.
Day (Day)
Armel Hostiou's haunting study of urban alienation follows three characters—a woman, a man, and a child—over the period of a single day in Paris. They don't know each other and they won't cross paths, but they share an insidious feeling of confinement. Because of an external event, each of them will leave their environment and undergo an experience that confronts them with the uncomfortable and dangerous dimensions of their shared urban space. Through its patient observation of the quotidian, of the passage of time from morning to night, Day reacquaints us with the strangeness of everyday life.
An Argument for Old Age (An Argument for Old Age)
'If you drink this juice, you'll make it to a hundred' says the young man to his old neighbor, who replies: 'I got to a hundred without this juice, didn't I?' Humor and wit form the basis of a friendship that bridges a huge age difference and allows the centenarian to resume: 'For me the best part of life is being old'. A travelling artist, painter and filmmaker has a centenarian neighbour. The relationship between this man in his forties and the solitary old lady with a wicked sense of humour gradually becomes a kind of elective kinship. Their discussions, interrupted and picked up again over the years, form the fabric of this personal, tender and surprising film. A calm observation on the inescapable power of the passage of time.
The Pilgrim (The Pilgrim)
The Tramp is an escaped convict who is mistaken as a pastor in a small town church.
Delicate Gravity (Delicate Gravity)
Paul receives an emotional message from Claire. He can hear the deep sadness behind her words and believes she might commit suicide…
Program break (Program break)
Banjo Farid (Banjo Farid)
Twelve-year-old Farid remains desperately secretive and opens up to no one. Quiet, out of sync, attracted by nothing, he seems to suffer everyday life without feeling the slightest emotion. One day, however, against all expectations, a transformation will take place and Farid will assert himself thanks to an improbable musical instrument.
Moulin Rouge (Moulin Rouge)
Parysia is the rage of Paris. She has a daughter, secretly engaged to Andre, and the boy's aristocratic father objects to the alliance because of Margaret's mother being a revue artist. Director Ewald Andre Dupont took almost a year to make Moulin Rouge at a production cost of $500,000, a huge amount for 1928.
The Southerner (The Southerner)
Sam Tucker, a cotton picker, in search of a better future for his family, decides to grow his own cotton crop. In the first year, the Tuckers battle disease, a flood, and a jealous neighbor. Can they make it as farmers?
Frieda (Frieda)
A Royal Air Force pilot who was shot down during World War II returns home to his English village with his new bride. The trouble is that she is the German lady who helped him escape. Then her brother arrives.
Father (Father)
When did you last talk with your father? Will you ever ask him about those things that hurt you? In Father the reality of life is turned upside down to create an impossible dialogue - the dialogue between a child and a father that never happens.
Captain Kidd (Captain Kidd)
The unhistorical adventures of pirate Captain Kidd revolve around treasure and treachery.
Carnival of Souls (Carnival of Souls)
After a traumatic accident, a woman becomes drawn to a mysterious abandoned carnival.
Went the Day Well? (Went the Day Well?)
An English village is occupied by disguised German paratroopers as an advance post for a planned invasion.
The Chase (The Chase)
Chuck Scott gets a job as chauffeur to tough guy Eddie Roman; but Chuck's involvement with Eddie's fearful wife becomes a nightmare.
Born to Be Wild (Born to Be Wild)
Truck drivers Steve Hackett and Bill Purvis are fired from their jobs with the West Coast Trucking company for not using second-gear going down steep grades.
Sagebrush Trail (Sagebrush Trail)
Imprisoned for a murder he did not commit, John Brant escapes and ends up out west where, after giving the local lawmen the slip, he joins up with an outlaw gang. Brant finds out that 'Jones', one of the outlaws he has become friends with, committed the murder that Brant was sent up for, but has no knowledge that anyone was ever put in jail for his crime. Willing to forgive and forget, Brant doesn't realize that "Jones" has not only fallen for the same pretty shopgirl Brant has, but begins to suspect that Brant is not truly an outlaw.
The Captive Heart (The Captive Heart)
In 1940, a concentration-camp escapee assumes the identity of a dead British officer, only to become a prisoner of war.
Her Lonely Lane (Her Lonely Lane)
Fumiko struggles to get her literary work published, spending years working in poverty while being abused by her boyfriend all the while hoping to break free from the cycle.
Ciguenas (Ciguenas)
A pregnant girl and her childhood friend leave the city to seek help. That takes them on an unexpected coming of age journey of self-discovery during which they reflect on their lives and are faced with decisions that will determine their future.