William F. Claxton,
Lewis Allen,
Leon Benson,
Don McDougall,
Robert Altman,
Richard C. Sarafian,
Paul Henreid,
Joseph Sargent,
Nicholas Colasanto,
James B. Clark,
Tay Garnett,
Arthur Lubin,
Jacques Tourneur,
Christian Nyby,
Herman Hoffman,
Edward Ludwig,
Leo Penn,
Robert Butler,
Nicholas Webster,
Vincent McEveety,
Bruce Bilson,
Marc Daniels,
Joseph Pevney,
John Brahm,
Philip Leacock,
Virgil W. Vogel,
John Rich,
R.G. Springsteen,
Harry Harris,
Bernard McEveety,
Joseph H. Lewis,
Irving J. Moore,
Jesse Hibbs,
Robert Gordon,
Joseph Kane,
Alf Kjellin,
E.W. Swackhamer,
Seymour Robbie,
Herschel Daugherty,
Charles F. Haas,
Michael D. Moore,
William Witney,
Alan Crosland Jr.,
Sutton Roley,
Gerd Oswald,
John Peyser,
Felix E. Feist,
Gerald Mayer,
Arthur H. Nadel,
Maurice Geraghty,
William Wiard,
Michael Landon,
Robert Totten,
Don Richardson,
John Florea,
Thomas Carr,
Hollingsworth Morse,
Joseph Lejtes,
Gunnar Hellström,
James Neilson,
Herbert L. Strock,
George Blair,
Murray Golden,
Paul Landres,
Charles R. Rondeau,
Dick Moder,
Paul Nickell,
Jean Yarbrough,
Alvin Ganzer,
Robert Sparr,
Robert L. Friend,
William D. Faralla,
Chris Christenberry,
Richard Bartlett
The High-Sierra adventures of Ben Cartwright and his sons as they run and defend their ranch while helping the surrounding community.
John Greening,
Michael Owen Morris,
Steve Finn,
Karl Neilson,
Julie Dean Smith,
Richard Platt,
David Mason,
Barry Letts,
David Tucker,
Jeremy Silberston,
Paul Unwin,
Edward Bazalgette,
Justin Chadwick,
Peter Edwards,
Jim Goddard,
Antonia Bird,
Brian Stirner,
James Larkin,
Jeremy Brock,
Tom Hooper,
Harper Graeme,
Evans Matthew,
Shill Steve,
S.J. Clarkson,
Nick Copus,
Richard Laxton,
Charles Beeson,
Dearbhla Walsh,
Susan Tully,
Clare Kilner,
William Sinclair,
Richard Holthouse,
Kenneth Glenaan,
Nick Cohen,
John Bruce,
Alan Wareing,
James Kent,
Andy Hay,
Julian Holmes,
Albert Barber,
Michael Samuels,
Paul Harrison,
Elizabeth Gill,
Dermot Boyd,
James Erskine,
Andrew Morgan,
Peter Moffatt,
Keith Boak,
Gerald Blake,
Richard Dale,
Nic Phillips,
Menhaj Huda,
Sallie Aprahamian,
Laurence Wilson,
Paul Annett,
Steve Goldie,
Michael Keillor,
Michael E. Briant,
Ronald Wilson,
William Slater,
Bill Hays,
Alex Kalymnios,
Jon East,
Marc Jobst,
Dominic Keavey,
David Richardson,
Julie Edwards,
Vito Rocco,
Garth Tucker,
Ian Barber,
Margy Kinmonth,
Dez McCarthy,
Michael Kerrigan,
Simon Meyers,
Alice Troughton,
Chris Fallon,
Johnathan Young,
Philippa Langdale,
Tim Leandro,
Sarah Hooper,
Laura Way,
Craig Douglas,
Piotr Szkopiak,
Chris Lovett,
Philip Casson,
Chris Clough,
Douglas Argent,
Nick Jones,
Lisa Clarke,
Colin Wratten,
Beryl Richards,
David Kester,
Roger Gartland,
Leonard Lewis,
Jonathan Dent,
Kay Patrick,
Toby Frow,
Nigel Douglas,
Audrey Cooke,
David Innes Edwards,
Jamie Annett,
Gwennan Sage,
Bill Britten,
Dominic Santana,
Christopher Hodson,
Indra Bhose,
Jean Stewart,
Joy Perino,
Ron Craddock,
Lance Kneeshaw,
Bruce Webb,
Topher Campbell,
Ian White,
Mike Dormer,
Paul Wroblewski,
Jaden Clark,
Mervyn Cumming,
Penelope Shales,
Mike Barnes,
Matthew Robinson,
Tony Virgo,
Pip Short,
Stephen Butcher,
Rob Evans,
Angie de Chastelai Smith,
Michael Ferguson,
Brian Morgan,
Frank Cox,
Anne Ross Muir,
Jeremy Ancock,
Jim Shields,
Hannah Quinn,
Malcolm Taylor,
Nicky Higgens,
Richard Davidson,
Rebecca Gatward,
John Dower,
Stephen Garwood,
Peter Rose,
Terry Iland,
Darrol Blake,
Alister Hallum,
Gill Wilkinson,
John Howlett,
Stephen Moore,
Jeff Naylor,
Henry Foster,
Geoff Feld,
Christiana Ebohon,
Ian White,
Peter Boisseau,
Nicholas Prosser,
Sue Butterworth,
Philip Draycott,
Sue Bysh,
Bill Gilmour,
Mickey Jones
The everyday lives of working-class residents of Albert Square, a traditional Victorian square of terrace houses surrounding a park in the East End of London's Walford borough.
The everyday lives of working-class residents of Albert Square, a traditional Victorian square of terrace houses surrounding a park in the East End of London's Walford borough. close
David Gould,
Geoffrey Nottage,
Danny Raco,
Scott Hartford-Davis,
Brendan Maher,
Colin Budds,
Andrew Prowse,
Ian Watson,
Peter Andrikidis,
Julie Money,
Lewis Fitz-Gerald,
Frank Arnold,
Michael Offer,
Paul Moloney,
Peter Phelps,
Jeffrey Walker,
Di Drew,
Brown Grant,
Bennett Geoff,
Karl Zwicky,
Chris Langman,
Judith John-Story,
Ian Gilmour,
Mark Piper,
Chris Martin-Jones,
Peter Sharp,
Arnie Custo,
Bill Hughes,
Jet Wilkinson,
Steve Mann,
Andrew Friedman,
Riccardo Pellizzeri,
Richard Jasek,
Lynn Hegarty,
Mandy Smith,
Geoffrey Cawthorn,
Catherine Millar,
Cameron Welsh,
Nicholas Bufalo,
Rob Stewart,
Matthew Moore,
Bob Meillon,
Tony Osicka,
Helen Gaynor,
Peter Carstairs,
Jovita O'Shaughnessy,
Sam Atwell,
Julian McSwiney,
Jonathan Geraghty,
Kieran Murphy,
Jennifer Perrott,
Cath Roden,
Brian Lennane,
Alan Coleman,
Andrew Dillon,
Rebecca Barry,
Viktors Ritelis,
Ali Ali,
Leigh Spence,
Jane Manning,
Aarne Neeme,
Sean Nash,
Tony Gardiner,
Peter Barrett,
Kane Christopher,
Darlene Johnson,
Louise Leitch,
Chris Adshead,
Philip East
Home and Away is set in the fictional town of Summer Bay, a coastal town in New South Wales, and follows the personal and professional lives of the people more
Home and Away is set in the fictional town of Summer Bay, a coastal town in New South Wales, and follows the personal and professional lives of the people living in the area. The show initially focused on the Fletcher family, Pippa and Tom Fletcher and their five foster children Frank Morgan, Carly Morris, Steven Matheson, Lynn Davenport and Sally Keating, who would go on to become one of the show's longest-running characters. The show also originally and currently focuses on the Stewart family. During the early 2000s, the central storylines focused on the Sutherlands and later, the Hunters. Home and Away had proved popular when it premiered in 1988 and had risen to become a hit in Australia, and after only a few weeks, the show tackled its first major and disturbing storyline, the rape of Carly Morris; it was one of the first shows to feature such storylines during the early timeslot. H&A has tackled many adult-themed and controversial storylines; something rarely found in its restricted timeslot. close
David Heeley,
John Downer,
Fred Kaufman,
Allison Argo,
Susan Fleming,
Richard Foster,
Mark Jones,
Amanda Barrett,
Owen Newman,
Nigel Cole,
Bill Travers,
Miles Barton,
Adam Ravetch,
Jeff Turner,
Ginger Kathrens,
John Rubin,
Paul Atkins,
Tim Shepherd,
Kevin Bachar,
Bruce Reitherman,
Sally Thomson,
Mark Ferns,
Andrew Graham-Brown,
Tom Mustill,
Tom Hugh-Jones,
Michael Schlamberger,
Polly Steele,
Fergus Beeley,
Nigel Marven,
Ron Bowman,
Fred Fougea,
Ian Herring,
Klaus Feichtenberger,
Peter Schnall,
Gail Willumsen,
Ellen Goosenberg Kent,
Ian McCarthy,
Ellen Hovde,
Muffie Meyer,
Mark Brownlow,
Shane Moore,
Corinna Faith,
Jonathan Keeling,
Daniel Huertas,
Peter Lown,
Ben Roy,
Martin Dohrn,
Joe Loncraine,
John Murray,
Charlotte Scott,
Mike Dilger,
Michael deGruy,
Ingrid Kvale,
Anuschka Schofield,
Rupert Barrington,
Paul Scott,
Doug Mackay-Hope,
Alan Degen,
Rob Sullivan,
Tom Simon,
Mike Birkhead,
Anwar Mamon,
John Paling,
Erna Buffie,
Steve Westh,
Dave Allen,
Matthew Wright,
Gavin Boyland,
Sophie Darlington,
Hugh Miles,
Kelly Bryarly,
Sacha Mirzoeff,
Mark Deeble,
Victoria Stone,
Robyn Keene-Young,
Ben Wallis,
Caroline Brett
Consistently stunning documentaries transport viewers to far-flung locations ranging from the torrid African plains to the chilly splendours of icy Antarctica. more
Consistently stunning documentaries transport viewers to far-flung locations ranging from the torrid African plains to the chilly splendours of icy Antarctica. The show's primary focus is on animals and ecosystems around the world. A comic book based on the show, meant to be used an as educational tool for kids, was briefly distributed to museums and schools at no cost in the mid-2000s. close
Moviewatch was a film review television programme broadcast on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom. It ran from 1993 to 1997. The programme was hosted by more
Moviewatch was a film review television programme broadcast on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom. It ran from 1993 to 1997.
The programme was hosted by Johnny Vaughan. It was broadcast weekly. Each week four members of the public would watch four forthcoming films. They would then discuss each film in turn, along with Johnny.
The guest reviewers would mark each film out of ten. The film with the highest rating at the end of the show was declared the Moviewatch Film of the Week. During the show's run, only one film achieved a perfect 10/10 from all four reviewers - Spike Lee's Malcolm X. close