Documentary about the history of Jornal do Brasil, founded on April 14, 1891. In 1965, the Jornal do Brasil marked its innovative and active position, as recorded in the documentary "A Seventv-Four- Year-Old Fellow" by the filmmaker Nelson Pereira dos Santos, and the story itself was in charge of confirming. In the following years, the newspaper would witness the most remarkable events of the second half of the twentieth century in Brazil and in the world. It would applaud the democratic struggles and independence of peoples, support social demonstrations against oppression and justice at all levels. Tirelessly, he did not hesitate to report the truth of the facts, regardless of the circumstances in which they presented themselves.

In Japan, there is an informal agreement between mainstream media and the government that is hardly ...

This film examines how media empires, led by Rupert Murdoch's Fox News, have been running a "race to...

In a beach town on the coast of Senegal sits a basketball academy attended by the most promising pla...

Three college students start a social experiment to prove that reality changes according to the word...

Salhia Brakhlia has filmed the set and behind the scenes of Franceinfo's breakfast show during a yea...

The story of how newspapers were distributed during the Blitz, stressing the importance of an accura...

In the midst of a publishing revolution, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, one of America's most sto...

Smithsonian Magazine once asked the rhetorical question, 'Can a weekly paper in rural New Mexico rai...

Martha Gellhorn, Ruth Cowan, Dickey Chappelle: Three tenacious journalists who forged legendary repu...

The murder of Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh by an Islamic extremist in 2004, followed by the publish...

Rich Peppiatt delivers a satirical dissection of the newspaper trade by turning the tables on unscru...

In 2016, a young Austrialian filmmaker began documenting amateur inventor Peter Madsen. One year in,...

A Bunch of Questions with No Answers (2025) is a 23-hour film by artists Alex Reynolds and Robert M....

Grandchild fraudsters scare their victims on the phone with so-called "shock calls". The losses run ...

NOTHING TO HIDE is an independent documentary dealing with surveillance and its acceptance by the ge...

There were two wars in Iraq--a military assault and a media war. The former was well-covered; the la...
This film journeys deep into the heart of Austria’s favorite daily newspaper, the Kronen Zeitung, th...

The Morning Sun Shines is a fiction-documentary film by Kenji Mizoguchi and Seiichi Ina. The film is...

The title of the film is the date on which the editorial staff of Hungary’s largest opposition newsp...