A boy receiving treatment for his auto-immune disorder discovers that the house he’s living in isn’t as safe as he thought.
A boy receiving treatment for his auto-immune disorder discovers that the house he’s living in isn’t as safe as he thought.
Emily Willis, in her jacket, bare legs and heels exits her building and steps into a black town car. She sits in the middle of two handsome men, Danny Mountain and Charles Dera. As they drive, the man in the back asks her if she is ready and if she will give herself over completely. Emily says “yes.” He strips her out, exposing her bare skin. Beautiful and submissive housewife Casey Calvert is getting ready for her husband, Seth Gamble, to get home from work. She admires her darling, obedient pet, Whitney Wright, before leaving the room. It’s almost time for the husband to arrive, and they’re both eager to greet him after his long day at work. Secretary Jill Kassidy is laying on the floor with her ass up, looking sexy in her white blouse, pencil skirt and high heels. Her fingers glide along the keys of the typewriter as she types “YES BOSS” over and over again. In the background, her boss Derrick Pierce watches from his desk, hungrily admiring the view.
Amy was suffering from debilitating depression, until God healed her and helped her reshape her life into something amazing. In DON’T GIVE UP she tells the story of her meeting with Jesus and how it opened her eyes to the gifts around her.
Faye (Sarah French), a former actress who lost her vision due to botched laser eye surgery, struggles to put her life back together while living alone in her dream house in the Hollywood Hills. Supported by her friend Sophia (Caroline Williams), she starts opening up to Luke (Tyler Gallant), a personal trainer who is mute and can communicate only through his cell phone. When a masked stranger named Pretty Boy (Jed Rowen) shows up, Faye will realize that she isn’t as alone as she thinks.
One brutal home invasion, five murders, two detectives and No Witnesses.
Isaac and Joey have a superhero for a father. They worship their Dad, Brian Eisch, a decorated, third generation soldier who spends most of their childhood deployed in Afghanistan while other family members care for the boys. When Brian is injured and returns home a different man, all three must reconcile with the aftershocks of war. As Brian fights to retain control of himself and his loved ones, fate continues to challenge his belief in justice and self-determination. Catrin Einhorn and Leslye Davis’s stunning ethnographic study of American masculinity and generational tragedy follows the Eischs for close to a decade as their intense father-son bond is challenged time and time again. Davis’s restrained and beautiful cinematography subtly captures moments of raw anguish and unadulterated joy. This deeply moving portrait of a family called to serve explores the meaning of sacrifice, the need for purpose, and the challenges of being a father, a soldier and a son. Presented by Netflix.
In the late 90s, a video archivist unearths a series of sinister pirate broadcasts and becomes obsessed with uncovering the dark conspiracy behind them.
Aaron Walker returns back to his old estate upon hearing about the death of his younger brother Tom who died from a drugs overdose. Aaron is forced to visit his old ways and delves into a life of crime, he soon uncovers some dark secrets about his past which come back to haunt him.
Follows the story of Abu Zubaydah, the first high-value detainee subjected to the CIA’s program, later identified as torture by those outside the agency.
After her boyfriend dumps her on the eve of their exotic vacation, impetuous dreamer Emily Middleton persuades her ultra-cautious mother, Linda to travel with her to paradise. Polar opposites, Emily and Linda realize that working through their differences as mother and daughter – in unpredictable, hilarious fashion – is the only way to escape the wildly outrageous jungle adventure they have fallen into.
In late nineteenth-century America, Rising Free portrays the story of a young woman living in the aftermath of racial prejudice. Surrounded by danger of being sold and further stripped of freedom, she discovers hope through a gracious family and learns forgiveness and overwhelming mercy from her own transformation.
South Vietnam, late afternoon on August 18, 1966 – for three and a half hours, in the pouring rain, amid the mud and shattered trees of a rubber plantation called Long Tan, Major Harry Smith and his dispersed company of 108 young and mostly inexperienced Australian and New Zealand soldiers are fighting for their lives, holding off an overwhelming enemy force of 2,500 battle hardened Main Force Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army soldiers. With their ammunition running out, their casualties mounting and the enemy massing for a final assault each man begins to search for his own answer – and the strength to triumph over an uncertain future with honor, decency and courage. The Battle of Long Tan is one of the most savage and decisive engagements in ANZAC history, earning both the United States and South Vietnamese Presidential Unit Citations for gallantry along with many individual awards. But not before 18 Australians and more than 245 Vietnamese are killed.