Four chapters in the tumultuous life of the celebrated and controversial 20th century US intellectual, writer, philosopher and political activist Susan Sontag, based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning biography 'Sontag: Her Life' by Ben Moser.
A documentary presenting human-centered stories on infant mortality, highlighting how a UK-based innovation - featuring AI-powered machines - can help prevent infant health crises and save lives across borders. Recognised by the NHS, this medical breakthrough has the potential to reshape history and protect every precious breath.
We'll meet:
* A family in India that experienced the tragic loss of a newborn due to delayed care.
* A British medical innovator developing AI-integrated machines to bridge gaps in neonatal surgery and monitoring.
* A UK-based family whose child survived due to early access to this technology.
This multi-narrative approach aims to emotionally engage global audiences while showcasing the real-world impact of medical innovation.
Milan, 2026 – Right Place Right Time follows the untold human stories behind the Winter Olympics, capturing fleeting moments of triumph, struggle, and serendipity. Through the eyes of athletes, spectators, and creators, the film explores how being in the right place at the right time can transform ordinary moments into extraordinary experiences, revealing the cultural, emotional, and personal dimensions of one of the world’s largest sporting events.
George Best was one of the greatest footballers who ever lived. But he was so much more than that. Although the football pitch was his arena, Best was essentially a pop star - young, stylish, strikingly beautiful, possessed of a creative confidence that bordered on arrogance, and worshipped by young men and women alike. Like The Beatles and The Rolling Stones.
This film is simultaneously a celebration of a genius and an exploration of the demons that brought him down. We all know how these biopics traditionally work: in this case a talented but innocent young man from the backstreets of a divided but still pre-Troubles Belfast, becomes a star. But his time at the top is agonizingly short: a family history of alcoholism doesn’t help, in those pre-drug Sixties everyone wanted to buy him a drink, and before he was thirty, he was a washed up drunk.
But we’re taking the Benjamin Button approach here. No-one wants to go out on a downer, with the end card telling us how many hundreds of thousands lined the streets of his home town to bid him farewell, along with the millions watching on live television.
Thomas Greene is a reserved surgical theatre support worker in Liverpool, known for his polite nature and routine life. But everything changes when he kills a woman in self-defense - Mary, a deeply disturbed single mother who lured Thomas into her fractured world. She believed her children were still alive. They weren’t. The trauma of this moment shatters something within Thomas.
As the investigation into Mary’s violent past unfolds, Thomas finds himself haunted by what he saw - and what he did. But instead of guilt, he feels a strange calm. A calm that grows darker with every passing day.
Now, women across the city begin to vanish - each case linked by eerie silence and surgical precision. Detective Jack Latham suspects a pattern, but the killer leaves no trace. No emotion. No motive. Just method.
Behind the charm and quiet eyes, Thomas hides a growing obsession: cleansing the world of those he deems unworthy. The city remains unaware that a predator walks among them - one born not from rage or revenge, but from the cold clarity of silence.
The true story that became the basis one of the greatest horror movies of all time, following a journalist attempting to uncover the truth behind several unexplained deaths.
1350, England: A heroic knight returns to his plague-ravaged homeland. Wracked with guilt for leaving his wife and neglecting his people, he vows to rescue a village woman who vanished in a haunted forest.
In the 1830s, Winnifred ‘Freddie’ Sheridan finds herself convicted to serve a sentence at the ‘Cascades Female Factory’ in Tasmania. There she meets the charismatic Ellen Scott, a female convict who has created a joyful counter-culture within the misery of 'The Cascades' - a rebel faction known as the ‘Flash Mob’. Together, the two women will grow the ‘Flash Mob’ from an underground movement into a prison-wide feminist phenomenon that could threaten the very existence of ‘The Cascades’.