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1-27 of 27
- The idea is simple - bring saltwater into the desert -evaporate it by means of the sun and create freshwater, food and energy in desert areas, thus creating the potential to change the lives of millions. But every drop of fresh water requires a drop of sweat.
- A plantations shift to eco-friendly palm oil in Borneo. Partnering with Copenhagen Zoo, they restore forests, protect wildlife, and combat pests, demonstrating sustainable resource production and environmental conservation. action.
- The film follows four strong-willed and dynamic young Greenlanders that deeply disagree on which direction their country should follow, but all are fighting for a better Greenland.
- At the end of the 19th century, Denmark saw the beginning of a strong co-operative movement. The consumer co-operatives, Brugsen, were the first, followed by the dairy- and the slaughterhouse co-operatives along with many others small co-operatives. Small dairy- and pig farmers joined forces and shared the profits. The Story of the Danish Co-operative Movement - an entertaining and informative series in the three parts produced for Danish television, DRK.
- How to Kill a Cloud is a documentary of a Finnish female scientist trying to create rain in the United Arab Emirates desert. Can ambition be measured in rain?
- A film about The Missionaries coming til north of Nigeria. Based on exceptional archiveThe story of European christian missionaries in Africa is not just about the past - on the contrary. A fascinating, historical film in two parallel tracks.
- Theater director Stein Winge has lost his wife Kari. Then he gets help from his daughter Viktoria in order to get through grief.
- A Danish research team f is among the world's leading climate researchers. Their ice core research on the Greenland ice sheet attracts scientists with a common goal of predicting how our climate will change as the planet gets warmer.
- They were among the 250,000 German refugees, evacuated to Denmark on Hitler's command at the end of World War II. Now the four former refugee children look back at the dangerous escape and their stay in Denmark.
- It Takes A Family is drama about secrets and repressed memories. Director, Susanne Kovacs, is the grandchild of Jewish Holocaust survivors and the daughter of a German mother and a Danish Jewish father. When Susanne is born, in the eyes of her grandparents she is a child of the enemy and a constant reminder of their tragic past. Years later, Susanne starts asking the difficult questions only to discover that the war never really ended in the tormented family; Somehow, the horrors of the past have always been present as a deafening yet unspoken trauma.
- Hedda Lundh was a railway saboteur who transported explosives during the Occupation. At the time, she was called a terrorist - today she is called a freedom fighter. Her all-female resistance group was handed over to the Gestapo by a collaborator, Grethe Bartram, from Århus.
- Anne-Marie Soeborg is 95 years old, cultural-radical, and lives in Copenhagen. Lying in bed, receiving visitors and drinking Manhattans, Anne-Marie has strong opinions on everything and a grotesque sense of humor. Her grand-daughter, Anna-Katarina, travels the world, filming for the New York Times, and her daughter, Anne-Mette, works as a pastor, despite having lost a leg and an arm in a car accident. The three women are living together - an arrangement that has lasted for six generations. Men are wonderful, but only for show and fun. We join Anne-Marie at her bedside for her 95th birthday and witness the revelation of family secrets.
- Michelle would not mind wearing a scarf if she had to go to Iran. She is born and bred in Denmark and she has led a life very different from that of her Iranian mother and grandmother. Nobody is going to tell them to cover up their hair. Michelle's mother, Hilda, fled to Denmark when she was 21 in pursuit of a life like the one the Danes live in their peaceful single-family houses. Two years after, Hilda's parents, grandmother and little brother followed her to Denmark, but life did not quite turn out the way they hoped.
- Anna Elisabeth Gonge has lived her whole life in Southern Jutland and despite great family tragedies, she has managed to keep up her good spirits and a sunny disposition. A Sunny Disposition is the story of Anna Elisabeth from when she was born in a small village in Southern Jutland in 1924 up until today where she is celebrating her 90th birthday with her family and friends in the old border in Christiansfeld.
- Gertrud Pedersen and Annie Langberg carried explosives and helped parachute agents from the Jutlandic Resistance Movement. Lis Mellemgaard printed illegal books in Copenhagen. Many of their friends were sent to concentration camps or were executed by the Germans.
- The portrayal of a city that refuses to die along with its defunct Soviet-era nuclear power plant. The mainly Russian speaking citizens there face identity issues in modern Lithuania. This portrayal inevitably raises questions of democracy, inclusion, citizenship, and freedom of expression.
- Sabrina had a serious car accident with her family when she was nine years old. Now she is total paralyzed - but insist to have a FULL life, even though she cant do everything like other young people.
- Mohammed Khatib is a corpulent, charismatic and uncompromising man. Having lived and worked as a doctor in the Shatila camp in Beirut for many years, he has now dedicated his life to collecting historic artifacts, documenting the Palestinian cultural heritage. The film will show us how in some places of the world people must and will fight hard to keep their cultural heritage and why this is crucial to some because only through this heritage they will be able to exist and withhold their identity and legitimacy.
- Kasper Nørgaard Thomsen is a writer, and though his readership is quite small, several critics have described his work as exceptional and visionary. For four years, director Ulrik Gutkin has followed Kasper as he worked on his fifth book, Hyperion. During the process, Kasper falls in love, and before long the love of his life becomes pregnant. But being a father, a partner, and a writer is not easy when high aspirations are constantly challenged by an insistent everyday life.
- Benthe Asmussen, Lis Bomhoff, Else Marie Pade, Karen Ruge, and Dorthe Røssell were caught by the Gestapo during the Occupation. In this third and last episode in the series, they tell about the arrests, the interrogations, and the Frøslev Prison Camp. More than 700 women and 5,000 men were interned at this strange concentration camp in the last years of the German Occupation. Some found love - others were sent to German concentration camps.
- In the documentary "The Pastoral Letter", Historian Bent Blüdnikow and former Chief Rabbi Bent Lexner set out on a historic journey to unveil the unknown story of Bishop Fuglsang-Damgaard and his fight against the Nazis.