Premium Only Content

Pandora's Box - 1929 | Starring Louise Brooks

The Gospel According to St. Matthew - 1964 | by Pier Paolo Pasolini.

Esther and the King - 1960 (HD) | Starring Joan Collins & Richard Egan

Manina, la fille sans voiles - 1952 (HD) | Avec Brigitte Bardot

Diary of a lost Girl - 1929 | Starring Louise Brooks

La Passion de Jeanne D'Arc - 1927 (HD) | Carl Theodor Dreyer

Metropolis - 1927 (HD) | by Fritz Lang

Battleship Potemkin - 1925 (Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninov & More | HD): SM Eisenstein

The Private Life of Henry VIII - 1933 (Colorized - HD) | Starring Charles Laughton

Napoleon - 1927 (Bizet & Rameau | HD) : Enfance - Combat de boules de neige

Agora | Black & White Version: Starring Rachel Weisz

The Legend of Tomiris (HD) | Black & White Version

Closely Watched Trains - 1966 (HD): Oscar Award

Embrace of the Serpent (HD) | Amazonian Jungle

The Last Man on Earth - 1964 (HD): Based on "I Am Legend" by Richard Matheson

La Tulipe Noire (HD) : Avec Virna Lisi et Alain Delon

Captain Pantoja and the Special Services (HD) | Black & White Version

The Adventures of Prince Achmed - 1926 (HD): by Lotte Reiniger

Les Miserables (Summary in 7 minutes)

The Good, The Bad & The Ugly - 1966: Music Intro

Manina, la fille sans voiles - 1952 (HD) | Avec Brigitte Bardot
Manina, the Girl in the Bikini (French: Manina, la fille sans voiles) released in the UK as Manina, the Lighthouse Keeper's Daughter), is a 1952 French film directed by Willy Rozier and starring Brigitte Bardot, Jean-François Calvé and Howard Vernon. The film is one of Bardot's first film roles, at the age of 17 and was controversial for the scanty bikinis worn by the young Bardot in the film, one of the first occasions when a bikini had appeared in film and when the bikini was still widely considered immodest.
Though released in France in 1952 as Manina, la fille sans voiles, the film was not released in the United States until 1958 as Manina, the Girl in the Bikini and in the United Kingdom until 1959 as The Lighthouse-Keeper's Daughter. In other countries it was released under other names. The film was able to be screened in the United States notwithstanding the Hays Code prohibition of exposure of the midriff as a foreign film.
The film was shot in Cannes, Nice and Paris in the summer of 1952. Brigitte Bardot's father had signed a contract, on behalf of his minor daughter, specifying that the film was not to show indecent images. When in the course of filming, a series of "highly suggestive" photographs of his daughter was released, he accused the producing company of not respecting the contract and demanded that the film not be projected without the permission of a court. He lost the suit.
-
Dr. Drew
7 hours agoSalty Cracker: Dr. Drew's Birthday, Sydney Sweeney's Jeans, Rosie's Apology To MAGA & More News From Our Clown World – Ask Dr. Drew
32.9K16 -
LIVE
Rallied
17 minutes agoWarzone Solo Challenges
92 watching -
LIVE
BonginoReport
1 hour agoMAHA Madness: RFK Jr. vs Newsom - Nightly Scroll w/ Hayley Caronia (Ep.127) - 09/04/2025
3,876 watching -
1:58:36
Redacted News
2 hours agoUkraine bans Christians, Trump Sends Troops to Chicago, German AFD members being murdered | Redacted
81.9K50 -
LIVE
Michael Franzese
1 hour agoMy Daughters CONFRONTED Me About Being a Mobster Dad
321 watching -
24:02
Kimberly Guilfoyle
4 hours agoCartel Strikes: Breaking News Coverage! | Ep.251
12.5K5 -
1:01:36
Sarah Westall
1 hour agoBlackrock & the WEF Collaborate for World Dominance, Free Agency with AI w/ Reinette Senum
5.09K -
3:08
Michael Heaver
12 hours agoOutraged UK Sends EMPHATIC Message
1101 -
1:20:15
vivafrei
3 hours agoRFK Jr. Takes on the Pharma WHOORES! Toddler-Assaulter Granted BAIL? COMPLYE WITH CRIMINALS! & more
94.6K59 -
LIVE
LadyDesireeMusic
3 hours ago $0.80 earnedLive Piano Request - Anti Brain Rot - Support Culture Shift
131 watching