A documentary film from New Hampshire Sea Grant following the stories of women in New Hampshire's traditionally male-dominated seafood and aquaculture industries, why they chose to work on the water, the challenges they face, and the reasons they've stayed.

This short documentary chronicles the culture and arts of Cambodian Americans and the Lowell, MA com...

DFW Punk, covering the Dallas/Ft. Worth punk/new wave scene. If you thought Texas in the late ’70s w...

POLICE OFFICER JIM BYRNE, Canada's most honoured Safety Education Specialist brings you his famous T...

The line between sexual consent and sexual coercion is not always as clear as it seems -- and accord...

Two friends, both Indigenous fishermen, are driven to desperation by a dying sea. Their friendship b...

The film features amazing scenes of places never before seen gathered by key space missions that cul...

An educational film about power sources that’s rendered as a lyrical meditation on heat and vapor, T...

“Use Your Eyes” is a police training film produced by the Alhambra Police Department, California, in...
Personal experiences of Northwest Ohio residents during the January 1978 blizzard that disrupted dai...

The extraordinary moving story of Toni Crews, a young mum with a rare terminal cancer who charted he...

This 1971 color anti-drug use and abuse film was produced by Concept Films and directed by Brian Kel...

This public-school educational film warns of the dangers of cheating. John Taylor is struggling with...

Black Is the Color highlights key moments in the history of Black visual art, from Edmonds Lewis’s 1...

Work. Eat. Sleep. And back to work. For a long time skippers in the North East of Scotland could not...

A Chinese documentary about rural workers and their education by educated youth sent to the countrys...