Pages tagged “Documentary”
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TIME & WATER | LandxSea Monthly
LandxSea Monthly’s series of Powerful Films about People and Planet returns to Montrose Playhouse this July with TIME & WATER. Facing the death of his country’s glaciers and the loss of his beloved grandparents, Icelandic writer Andri Snær Magnason turns his archives into a time capsule to hold what is slipping away — family, memory, time and water. From Oscar-winning documentary director Sara Dosa (FIRE OF LOVE).
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How to use the Film Archive?
Every film we screen at LandxSea is chosen with care for what it shows and for what it stirs in us. Here, you’ll find a growing collection of documentaries, dramas, shorts, and hybrid works that have lit up our screens and sparked meaningful conversations.
👇 Use the tags at the bottom of this page to start exploring.
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People's Emergency Briefing
What’s happening with climate and nature, and what does it mean for everyday life in the UK? This eye-opening new film brings together leading UK scientists and experts to share the latest evidence, and why it matters, from extreme weather and food security to health and the cost of living.
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OCEAN with David Attenborough
OCEAN with David Attenborough takes viewers on a breath-taking journey showing there is nowhere more vital for our survival, more full of life, wonder, or surprise, than the ocean.
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The Shepherd and the Bear
An aging shepherd in the Pyrenees struggles to find a successor as bears, being rewilded in the region, prey on his flock.
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Folktales
A heart-warming, uplifting documentary about the irrepressible bond between humans and their dogs, set against an inhospitable landscape of northernmost Norway.
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Paid in Blood
This independent documentary by Angus-based filmmaker Byron Pace follows an ambitious relocation of elephants from drought-stricken Namibia to the Democratic Republic of Congo.
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Power Station
The story of two artists in Walthamstow who set out to take their street off the grid, kickstarting a solar-powered energy revolution.
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Yanuni
Yanuni is an unflinching documentary from the frontlines of the Brazilian Amazon, where Indigenous leader Juma Xipaia and her husband Hugo fight for their land, life and the future of their unborn child. This is cinema of survival.
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When Fish Begin to Crawl
Celebrate the Flow Country’s new UNESCO status with this visually arresting cinematic triptych. With an original soundtrack performed by the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, this poetic meditation links ancient life to climate futures.