Montenegro is the newest European country with a proud history, one that is being falsified for current political purposes, thus creating an alternative identity. In a nation where it possible for two brothers to claim different ethnic backgrounds despite having the same parents, everything is on the table: language, church, democracy. Can the truth set Montenegro free?

This revealing portrait of Cuba follows the lives of Fidel Castro and three Cuban families affected ...

Filmed In the heart of the mountainous villages of Greece and North Macedonia, the documentary follo...

In Maija Blåfield’s documentary, eight former North Koreans talk about what it was like to watch ill...

A biography of Charles Wesley, father of the Weselyan Church, hymn writer, and preacher.

Images of Argentinian companies and factories in the first light of day, seen from the inside of a c...

Fernando Lemos, a Portuguese surrealist artist, fled from dictatorship to Brazil in 1952 searching f...

Imagine Dragons’ Mormon frontman Dan Reynolds is taking on a new mission to explore how the church t...

The recent democratic revolutions throughout Eastern Europe—Serbia in 2000, Georgia in 2003, and the...
The Hopperstad stave church is a marvelous, iconic architectural statement from the fjords of Norway...

A documentary on alternative music scene of Novi Sad (Serbia) that covers the period between 1989 an...

In an empty warehouse, four women remember the rooms of the house where they were tortured during th...

Part documentary, part expose, this film follows one-time child evangelist Marjoe Gortner on the "ch...

Making Dust is an essay film, a portrait of the demolition of Ireland's second largest Catholic Chur...

At the beginning of Sumadijska street in the vicinity of Slavija Square on the 11th August 1913, the...

Jesus Camp is a Christian summer camp where children hone their "prophetic gifts" and are schooled i...

In this film the last living witnesses of the events from Second World War are telling their stories...