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1-26 of 26
- A young F.B.I. cadet must receive the help of an incarcerated and manipulative cannibal killer to help catch another serial killer, a madman who skins his victims.
- A hard-nosed, conservative Marine impulsively proposes to the liberal reporter doing a story on him and agrees to help her raise her three daughters.
- A covert FBI agent infiltrates a ruthless gangster mob, but his life is at risk from a mysterious informant who funnels inside information to the hoodlums.
- The story of the late J. Edgar Hoover, who was head of the FBI from 1924-1972. The film follows Hoover from his racket-busting days through his reign under eight U.S. presidents.
- If you've seen Top Gun or Transformers, you might suspect all that military machinery comes with strings attached. This influence is not limited to a handful of movies, though. A vast new trove of internal documents reveals that the Pentagon and CIA have doctored thousands of film and television scripts. Parting the curtains on this world, media professor Roger Stahl engages an array of other stunned scholars, frustrated veterans, PR insiders, and industry producers. Stahl reveals in unsettling detail how the US military-industrial complex pushes a version of history that scrubs the screen of war crimes, corruption, criticism of the nuclear arsenal, racism, sexual assault, assassinations, and torture. From James Bond to Jack Ryan, Captain Marvel to Cake Boss, the creation of this other "cinematic universe" is one of the great PR coups of our time.
- The ultimate search of a Human Weapon, each episode of Human Weapon charts an expedition through foreign continents, famous cities, exotic villages, back alleys and lush landscapes.
- Three executives of an electronics firm discover a bomb aboard their airliner in this taut crime thriller--and the FBI's investigation puts everyone under a magnifying glass of suspicion.
- Documentary about serial killers and FBI Behavioral Sciences Profilers. Interviews with Ed Kemper and Ted Bundy as well as crime victims and law enforcement officials. Includes some Dramatic Recreations.
- An overview of the FBI and its activities, duties, and departments, especially focusing on post-9/11 counter-terrosist divisions, but also includes a brief history of the FBI government institution.
- A documentary-style short showing the inner-workings of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Presented with The Permission of the Hon. Homer S. Cummings, Attorney General of the U. S., and with The Cooperation of J. EDGAR HOOVER, Director Federal Bureau of Investigation of the Department of Justice.
- It is 2004 and America is embroiled in a war in Afghanistan. With unprecedented access, film makers follow a class through 9 weeks of selection and training at the U.S. Marine Corps Officer Candidates School (OCS). These young candidates experience a crucible of shouting drill instructors, mental challenge and physical exhaustion. Some drop out. Some fail to make the cut. If they survive, they will be expected to lead Marines into combat. This is where their story begins.
- What's it like to run the famed "Yellow Brick Road" or switch from handgun to automatic rifle on the weapons range at the FBI Training Academy in Quantico, Virginia? This film takes you inside with the 40 members of a training class as they endure 16 grueling weeks in the classroom, on the weapons range, in the gym, the pool, the aforementioned Yellow Brick Road obstacle course and even the moot courtroom. Since screening for the academy is so selective, most trainees make it all the way to become FBI special agents. You'll see how they enter the program, some a bit cocky and others very wary. They stumble along the way, some tripped up by the physical demands, others by the precision of the weapons instruction, still others by the academic rigor of the classroom or the exacting standards of a court hearing with real lawyers and a judge. Midway through the program, you begin to see a change and in the last week or so, you can tell these people are ready to join the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The film features intimate access to the students in every setting, including the dorms as they process another full day. You get a sense of why, on graduation day, the members of this class feel as if they earned their diplomas and the title "special agent."
- Reporter Edwin Pitti goes to the FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia in order to demonstrate the requirements and training that is needed in order to join the FBI. He also follows two students on their journey from being trainees to graduating and becoming FBI agents.
- This documentary follows director Brett Ratner through nearly every stage of production for the film Red Dragon (2002). This is a very informative and fun to watch piece that shows you how hard it is to direct a motion picture. Michael Jackson even makes a pointless appearance on the set and leads to a couple of funny instances. This title shows both the gruelling and fun aspects of making a movie.
- Raymond Massey narrates this short documentary film produced by the U.S. Treasury Department. Depicted is the battle of Iwo Jima in World War II, with the famous flag-raising atop Mount Suribachi by U.S. Marines and sailors. From the acclaimed photograph of the raising taken by Joe Rosenthal, sculptor Felix W. de Weldon creates a three-dimensional sculpture model, which then serves as the prototype for a larger statue which is installed at Quantico, Virginia, Marine Barracks. But de Weldon had a more ambitious plan, and with donations from citizens and Marines, he creates a 78-foot tall version of the statue and sees it installed at Arlington National Cemetery, where it stands as a memorial to all Marines who have died in the service of their country. In conclusion, actor and Marine Corps officer Tyrone Power makes an appeal for viewers to buy U.S. Savings Bonds.
- A wealthy young American, bred to class distinction and racial intolerance, enters the Marines during the First World War. In the course of his training and his experiences in the trenches fighting, being wounded by, and being hospitalized with Germans, he comes to a recognition of the equality and brotherhood of men.
- In this unique interactive movie, viewers make decisions for a hostage negotiator who is on the phone with a violent man holding his ex-wife hostage. You must make decisions that gain information, buy time for the tactical team, and calm the perpetrator. Respond correctly and you save the lives of the hostage and perpetrator. Make poor decisions and the day ends in tragedy. Writer/Director Jeffrey Hall was invited to attend the FBI's hostage negotiator school to create this uniquely authentic experience.
- Wounded Marine, Kionte Storey, lost a leg in Afghanistan, but has overcome all odds and now trains every day in the hopes of winning a spot on the International Paralympic Track Team.
- 2011– 1hTV-147.7 (7)TV EpisodeLarry spends a few days getting behind-the-scenes at some sites in our nation's capitol. He first gets access to the nerve center of the Pentagon few civilians have never seen before. He was the first on air talent from a none news crew allowed in the War Room as he explains during the program. Then Larry gets inside the FBI by being an actor. His participation in FBI scenario training reveals how agents master self-control and situational awareness. Larry then tries to become a G-Man and finally Larry tries at being a DC tour guide on the Amphibious vehicle DC Ducks tour.