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  1. It was incredible to experience this film. The people in it were right next to me on the movie theater. It was heartbreaking to hear them crying or laughing while seeing the film for the First time. those towers had a huge Impact in the city and no one cares about it. Glad to see the movie made some people happier.

  2. Let’s do our best to make sure these places aren’t only there now, for us to remember later. Zangs Films is proud to have collaborated with the fine folks over at Outdoor Alliance on this project, to highlight the issue at hand, and allow concerned people like yourselves to share their concerns with those in government that make critical decisions about how our public lands are managed.

  3. Life on Our Planet is our ground-breaking new 8-part series created by Silverback Films in association with Steven Spielberg’s Amblin Television. Narrated by Academy Award®-winner Morgan Freeman, it’s the story of life’s epic battle to conquer and survive on planet Earth. Today there are 20 million species on our planet, yet what we see ...

  4. 19 feb 2024 · Al Remaihi said: "Ode to Our Land is a passion project for all of us, an expression of sincere gratitude for our visionary leadership in driving Qatar’s thriving cinema ecosystem. His Highness, The Father Amir's tremendous achievements have fueled an unstoppable creative force and paved the way for us to become a world-renowned champion of Arab voices in film, television, and the arts.

  5. 9 nov 2023 · Oscar-nominated filmmaker Mira Nair (“Salaam Bombay!”) has come on board to executive produce “Our Land, Our Freedom,” from directors Meena Nanji and Zippy Kimundu, ahead of the film’s ...

  6. Directors Meena Nanji and Zippy Kimundu follow Wanjugu between 2016 and 2023. But the story they present begins decades before, when Kenya was under violent British rule, which eventually led to the founding of the Kenya Land and Freedom Army (a.k.a the Mau Mau) and the Kenyan Independence Movement.

  7. In March, 1974, the Cree of the Mistassini area in northern Québec met to discuss their long-term future. After three hundred years of minimal contact with the white man, they had been offered 'compensation' by the government of Québec for the effects of the James Bay power project. But they decided that nothing, neither jobs nor money, meant more to them than their land. The film presents ...