”The Network” connects both past and present – bouldering, sport, and competition climbing – and this cutting-edge film tangles the viewer inside the spider web of connections that makes up the world of the professional rock climber.
Heartland is a gripping and inspiring documentary about a small town in Southern Missouri that was hit by one of the deadliest tornadoes in American history.
On any given night, approximately fourteen thousand people in the Phoenix metropolitan area are homeless. In The Road Back Home, we meet five of them and follow their stories through victories and struggles, some surprising and others tragically familiar. Their stories are woven together with poignant insights from people who work with the homeless all the time. From a police officer who leads us to a surreal camp under a bridge to Lucy, a social worker whose tireless love for the homeless is as inspiring as it is unusual, we see not only the problem, but also a way forward, and reason for hope.
The Path: Beyond the Physical investigates topics about out-of-body experiences, multiple-dimensions, remote viewing and consciousness. The 93 minute film takes the audience through a journey of some of the first explorers of out-of-body experiences like Robert Monroe, to the once classified military mission of remote viewing, as well as educating the audience about tools they can use to enhance the out-of-body experiences. The Path Documentary Series will be showcasing the knowledge of many experts like the former President and Executive Director of the Monroe Institute in Faber, VA, a nonprofit educational and research organization dedicated to the exploration of human consciousness, leading out-of-body expert William Buhlman and a NASA nuclear physicist, noted lecturer and explorer of consciousness Thomas Campbell.
The groundbreaking Oscar®-nominated documentary Food, Inc. ignited a cultural conversation about the multinational corporations that control our food system at enormous cost to our planet, workforce and health. In the well-timed sequel, Food, Inc. 2, comes "back for seconds" to reveal how corporate consolidation has gone unchecked by our government, leaving us with a highly efficient yet shockingly vulnerable food system dedicated only towards increasing profits.