 | A comedy about the lives, loves and loneliness of the regulars who frequent a small pub in Manchester. Each evening the regulars swap tales about their lives as we overhear the gems of wisdom that pass between them. |
 | A comedy about the lives, loves and loneliness of the regulars who frequent a small pub in Manchester. Each evening the regulars swap tales about their lives as we overhear the gems of wisdom that pass between them. |
 | Three features. In 'How To Lose A Guy In 10 Days' a young political journalist takes a job writing an advice column for a women's magazine to make some money. In 'Sliding Doors' a PR assistant is sacked from her job and returns home early. Sliding... |
 | A drama based on the life of rock star Jim Morrison whose life came tragically to an end in a haze of drugs. |
 | A PR assistant is sacked from her job and returns home early. Sliding Doors looks at two possible scenarios on her return. |
 | All six episodes from Series One of the comedy about the lives, loves and loneliness of the regulars who frequent a small pub in Manchester. Each evening the regulars swap tales about their lives as we overhear the gems of wisdom that pass between... |
 | For the first time on television, this series tells the true story of Stalin’s encounters first with the Nazis and then with Churchill and Roosevelt and, consequently, their enormous impact on World War II and, later, the fate of post-war Europe. |
 | Features three of The Doors concerts: 'Dance On Fire', 'Live At The Hollywood Bowl' and 'The Soft Parade'. The tracklist includes 'Break On Through', 'Light My Fire', 'The End', 'Touch Me', 'Riders On The Storm', 'The Unknown Soldier', 'Hello I Love... |
 | Featuring performances by The Doors - 'When The Music's Over', The Who - 'Young Man Blues', Jimi Hendrix - 'Machine Gun', Joni Mitchell - 'Big Yellow Taxi', Moody Blues - 'Nights In White Satin', Miles Davies - 'Call It Anything', Free - 'All Right... |
 | Recorded live during the 1968 Independence Day celebrations. The only full-length performance film of The Doors, featuring among the many numbers 'Light My Fire', 'The Unknown Soldier' and 'The End', later used by Francis Coppola as the theme for... |