Download and listen to new, exclusive, electronic dance music and house tracks. Watch Into The Wild Full Movie. Available on mp3 and wav at the world’s largest store for DJs. Nature Documentaries That Will Blow Your Mind. You can learn so much without ever leaving your couch. The official FAQ of the Internet DVD newsgroups. Its primary emphasis is on video, but there is a section on data DVDs that describes each format. Watch Out "super-sensitive De M Wife Screaming In Agony As Soon As Ji Has Been Inserted" Rin Maple In The 40-year-old Affair Hot Springs 9 - 2016. Director Nicolas Roeg's (`Don't Look Now') cinematographic skills and admiration pay especial tribute to Walkabout's powerful combination of Australia's awesome. Ma Ananda Sarita Will Show You How to Dive Into the Tantra World of Pleasure, Intimacy & Consciousness With the Master Lover Online Course.
El abrazo de la serpiente (2. For 3. 50 years, Spain built a vast empire in South America based on the labor and exploitation of the Indian population, forcing them to accept Christianity while decimating their culture, religion, and even their language. In the late 1. 9th and early 2. Centuries, "rubber barons" rounded up all the Indians and forced them to tap rubber out of the trees in rainforest zones leading to slavery and human rights abuses.
Winner of the top Director's Fortnight Award at Cannes and Colombia's submission to the Oscars in the Best Foreign Film category, Ciro Guerra's ("The Wind Journeys") Embrace of the Serpent (El abrazo de la serpiente) provides a powerful insight into the effects of colonialism on an indigenous population. The film, in which nine different languages are spoken, follows two interconnected stories based on the travel journals of two Amazonian explorers thirty years apart, German scientist Theodor Koch- Grunberg (Jan Bijvoet, "Borgman") and American plant enthusiast Richard Evans Schultes (Brionne Davis, "Avenged"). Both men are seeking the Yakruna plant to discover its powerful ability to heal. The two explorers are accompanied by the Amazonian shaman Karamakate (Niblio Torres as a young man and Antonio Bolivar as the elder) not only to find the sacred plant for research purposes but to learn deeper truths about themselves and the nature of reality. Karamakate, the last surviving member of his tribe, guards the secrets of Yakruna, a last symbol of independence for his people. Filmed in black and white by cinematographer David Gallego ("Cecilia"), it is the first film to be shot on location in the Amazon in thirty years and its gorgeous kaleidoscope of rivers and forests, and the blending of time creates a surreal, dreamlike atmosphere, fortified by native songs and chants.
As the film begins, a young Karamakate, armed with a spear and dressed in native attire, stands menacingly as a boat approaches the shore containing the German scientist and his companion Manduca (Yauenku Migue), a native dressed in white man's clothing. Manduca asks the shaman to cure the explorer who is very sick, but Karamakate, who is familiar with the destructive nature of the white man, refuses. When Theo tells him, however, that he has seen survivors of his people and will take him to them, the young shaman agrees as long as the white man follows his "prohibitions" about disturbing the natural flow of the jungle. The two scientists, Theo in 1. Evan in 1. 94. 0, follow the same path and explore the same places drastically changed over the years. Karamakate, as he did with Theo, acts as Evan's guide and considers himself as a "chullachaqui," an empty shell of a human being, and must become a man once more in tune with nature. Two scenes stand out.
After a night of singing and dancing with a native group and demonstrating Western technology, Theodor becomes angry when a member of the group wants to keep his compass in exchange for goods. To rationalize his anger, he tells Karamakate that owning a compass would disturb their traditions of finding locations through the sun and stars, but the shaman tells him "You cannot forbid them to learn. Knowledge belongs to all men." The other scene is one of pure horror when a priest (Luigi Sciamanna, "Secreto de Confesion") at a Spanish mission is found brutally whipping his young students until Theodor intervenes. Despite an element of religious madness that feels out of sync with the tone of the film, Embrace of the Serpent soars when its focus is on spiritual awareness. The shaman tells both scientists the need to unburden themselves of their material possessions and explore the mystery of consciousness alone without their physical and psychological baggage. They cannot be cured of their illness, he tells them, because they have forgotten how to dream. After Evan ingests a native plant following a heated exchange with Karamakate, a montage of brilliant, swirling colors pushes the boundary of what we think is real and allows us to remember how to dream.
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Nature Documentaries That Will Blow Your Mind. Binge- watching comic- book shows and savoring prestige dramas are fine pastimes, but sometimes you need to sit back, relax, and look at animals walking around in scenic vistas. If you pay close attention, you might even learn a weird fact about monkeys that you can share with the girls next time there's a lull in pregaming conversation. And don't feel bad about rooting for the predators — everybody's gotta eat. Advertisement - Continue Reading Below. Planet Earth. This is the gold standard of nature documentaries, and for good reason. It's got everything — mountains, caves, deserts, and more importantly, the narration of Sir David Attenborough.
Did you know that there are undersea volcanoes taller than Mt. Everest? Well, you would if you watched Planet Earth! You'd also to get see a snow leopard, an animal so rare that it took three years to film one for the show. The Blue Planet. BBCAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below. Yet another David Attenborough joint, this series is all about the ocean, a crazy alien place that is not even a little bit as cute as Finding Nemo made it look. Fish are vicious and terrifying, as you will learn after watching the deep- ocean- centric "The Deep," an episode of television that has haunted me for the last 1.
Blackfish. Advertisement - Continue Reading Below. Advertisement - Continue Reading Below. This acclaimed 2. Tilikum, an orca responsible for the deaths of three people over the course of his 3. The movie paints a particularly damning picture of Sea. World, which claimed that Blackfish is "misleading." In March 2.
Sea. World announced plans to phase out their orca shows and breeding programs. Wildest Africa. Discovery. Each episode of this series focuses on a different African locale and the animals that live within them — Botswana's Okavango Delta, for example, or the Zambezi River in Zambia. One major takeaway: Hippos are not your friends.
Virunga. Advertisement - Continue Reading Below. Nominated for an Academy Award in 2. Leonardo Di. Caprio), this documentary spotlights Virunga National Park in the Democratic Republic of Congo and the conservationists working to make sure it remains a haven for mountain gorillas. The park remains a source of conflict as the government considers whether or not to drill for oil in nearby areas. Life. Advertisement - Continue Reading Below. Advertisement - Continue Reading Below. Guess who's back for a third time?
David Attenborough! Get over it, because he is a god among men.
Similar in scope to Planet Earth, Life focuses on the ways different species have evolved in order to survive, with each episode zeroing in on a different group like mammals, reptiles, and birds. Don't discount the "Plants" episode either — finding water in the desert is hard. Nature: Honey Badgers. There's a reason honey badgers became a meme, and the reason is that they are nuts. You likely know this if you've seen the iconic "honey badger don't give a shit" video, but this will explain why they're so awesome in slightly more highbrow terms.
In addition to finding out more about the whole "not caring about stings and bites" thing, you'll also get to see the insane lengths they'll go to in order to escape their pens. They really do not give a shit! Advertisement - Continue Reading Below. Nature: Animal Misfits. PBSWith extended looks at oddballs like penguins, sloths, and big- headed mole rats, this one may as well be called Nature's Derpiest.
The giant panda makes an appearance too, of course, because nothing is derpier than an all- bamboo diet and a complete disinterest in having sex to further your species. Dogs With Jobs. Cineflix. Advertisement - Continue Reading Below. Advertisement - Continue Reading Below. It's exactly what it sounds like — a show about dogs that have jobs. Watch The Secret Of The Magic Gourd Online.
It can be corny at times, but you'll be able to look past it because there's truly nothing better than a dog who's found his purpose in life. Frozen Planet. This is the last David Attenborough documentary on this list, I promise. If "Ice Worlds" is your favorite episode of Planet Earth, this is where you should go next, because the show is entirely about life in the Arctic and Antarctic. Pro tip: Skip to episode two to learn about the narwhal, aka the unicorn of the sea. Microcosmos. Advertisement - Continue Reading Below. A lot of nature documentaries focus on majestic beasts like whales and elephants, but this one takes a close- up look at the amazing world of insects. If bugs freak you out, though, you might want to stay away.
Africa. If you can't get enough of the elephants, lions, and giraffes in Planet Earth, enjoy this deep dive into the wildlife found in various regions of Africa like the Sahara and Kalahari deserts and the savannah. A version of this post originally ran in 2. Follow Eliza on Twitter.