In 1968 Joan Bakewell was one of the few female TV presenters, fronting the BBC's Late Night Line-Up and addressing daily the most pressing issues of the time. In this film she looks back at the events that led to what for many became the defining event of that extraordinarily turbulent year - the protests in France in May. While the rest of the world was in turmoil, with the Vietnam War causing increasing dissent, the Civil Rights movement growing in intensity and young people finding new ways of expressing themselves, as 1968 began it seemed to France's president, General de Gaulle, that his country was immune to the kind of protest sweeping the rest of the world.

A group of people are standing along the platform of a railway station in La Ciotat, waiting for a t...

France, 1974. The erotic film Emmanuelle, directed by Just Jaeckin, breaks all records for cinema at...

This documentary follows the French soccer team on their way to victory in the 1998 World Cup in Fra...

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I started from the assumption that the discourse about the hospital could be the objective pretext f...

Made in Japan, Last Room is both fiction and documentary. The occupants of the love-hotels and capsu...

Reserved by Citroën for immigrant workers, the Aulnay-sous-Bois factory experienced its first strike...
Students from nine nations unite on August 7, 1950 at the Franco-German border near Germanshof, tear...

Pierre Carles questions the privatization of the leading French televisions channel : is it not scan...