Dylan Avery
Asteroid
En ugift familiefar flytter fra storbyen med sin kone og datter til drømmehuset deres i utkanten av en liten by – akkurat i tide til at apokalypsen inntreffer.
SEVEN
Building 7 has been marred with controversy since it collapsed late in the afternoon on September 11th, 2001.Now, almost twenty years after the fact, Dr. Leroy Hulsey from the University of Alaska Fairbanks has chipped in. His findings are the result of four years, hundreds of thousands of dollars and incalculable computer graphics hours.Featuring interviews with engineers Roland Angle, Scott Grainger and Kamal Obeid, this documentary is a comprehensive look into the collapse of World Trade Center Building 7, narrated by the legendary actor Ed Asner.
Black and Blue
Inside the growing protest movement against police brutality. In 2011, six police officers in Fullerton, California, beat Kelly Thomas, a homeless schizophrenic man, so badly that he died of his injuries. Three years later, protests in Hollywood sparked after the officers were acquitted or had their charges dropped. Renowned filmmaker Dylan Avery attended the protest and, before he knew it, he was swept up into a world of grieving family members, retired police officers that now criticize the very system they used to serve, and civilians that have suffered brutality at the hands of those sworn to protect. Over the next two years, Avery followed multiple cases and developments that coincided with historic protests on the streets of Ferguson and Baltimore against institutionalized police racism and brutality.
Loose Change 9/11
September 11th, 2001. An event and a day many will never forget. However, for a growing population this event did not occur during their lifetime, but is merely a footnote in a new history book. Loose Change 9/11 serves as an alternate history book, setting out to ask the hard questions from that fateful day. Combining the four existing editions into one and incorporating new footage released to the public, this high definition version will hopefully leave you looking at September 11th, and the world, differently. Narrated by Daniel Sunjata of FX's "Rescue Me" with an original score by Mic Cartier.