
A young basketball player struggles to fit in with his new team.

An embittered “Scrooge” of a woman plans to sell her small town, regardless of the consequences to the people who live there.

The words “Black Power” bring back memories of names like Stokely Carmichael, H. Rap Brown, and Eldridge Cleaver, but in Bogalusa, LA a group of harassed Afro-Americans had decided they’d had enough and took up arms to defend themselves and force the white power structure to listen to them. This took place during “Freedom Summer”, 1964, right after the Civil Rights Act had become law. Fact based movie stars Forest Whitaker and Ossie Davis, the former as the founder of the Deacons of Defense and Justice (DDJ) and the latter as a peaceful minister trying to prevent the unavoidable violence that will follow. The story revolves around the white-controlled factory which provides 70% of the town’s income and employees 40% of its people. Segregation is still clinging on within the factory, with blacks denied the supervisory positions and forced into separate lunchrooms, bathrooms, and drinking fountains. The Ku Klux Klan (KKK) has its strongest power in this area and, as the DDJ gets armed …

An estranged Métis mother and daughter struggle to overcome their differences but their world comes crashing down when an alluring woman enters their lives.

Sun was worshiped as a child by a cult. 15 years later, Sun lives on the road hiding from her past. Tormented by memories, she travels back to the compound, unaware that the cult’s former leader is on his way back home.

Desperate for cash, a young woman dives into a wild social media venture with four unhinged stars. But fame turns toxic as egos clash, pushing their chaotic crew into a dark spiral of danger and betrayal.

A pair of outlaw brothers seek temporary refuge in a desolate town inhabited by a small family of psychotic cannibalistic lunatics.

A young artist wakes up to a life she doesn’t recognize, haunted by nightmares of drowning in a void, and she begins to question her sanity.

Reelz’s two-part miniseries Barabbas is a rare refreshing take. Based on the 1950 Nobel Prize-winning novel by Swedish author Par Lagerkvist, it follows the story of Barabbas, the man the Bible says was spared by the crowds under Pontius Pilate’s watch, sending Jesus Christ to the cross instead.

Stoic, seemingly unflappable Björn Borg (Sverrir Gudnason) and volatile, temperamental brat John McEnroe (Shia LaBeouf) competed for the Wimbledon title in 1980. On paper, it was a clash of opposites. But in fact, this film argues that the two men had more in common than anyone suspected at the time. Ice-man Borg, the main focus of this film, was in fact a volcano; his obsession with detail, his superstitions, were all part of the meticulous control mechanism he constructed to prevent the eruptions of anger that so tarnished McEnroe’s early reputation.

A young woman takes up a job as a live in housekeeper and slowly learns the owner may be connected to her sisters disappearance.

From “Pong” to “Pac Man” and “Super Mario” to “Lara Croft”, “Doom”, “Grand Theft Auto” and everything in between – it’s the story of the videogame revolution.