Watchlist

Come See Me in the Good Light is an intimate portrait of poet and activist Andrea Gibson, centered on love, mortality, and the courage of being seen. Filmed during Gibson’s journey with cancer, the documentary follows their partnership with Megan Falley, revealing how devotion deepens through tenderness, humor, grief, and fierce aliveness. Rather than framing illness as tragedy, the film becomes a meditation on presence — choosing honesty over performance, intimacy over fear, and allowing love to be witnessed in its most human form.

An intimate documentary portrait of leadership shaped by empathy, restraint, and relational intelligence. Prime Ministerfollows Jacinda Ardern through moments of crisis and care, offering a rare look at power exercised through listening, accountability, and emotional presence rather than dominance.

An intimate documentary about interspecies relationship, attention, and belonging, My Octopus Teacher follows a filmmaker’s daily encounters with an octopus in a South African kelp forest. What unfolds is not mastery or spectacle, but a practice of presence — learning through observation, patience, and care. The film invites reflection on reciprocity with the natural world and the quiet transformation that can occur when we slow down enough to truly witness another life.

Pluribus is a quietly profound, often funny series about collective life, shared responsibility, and the return to care in a fractured world. Set in a near-present America, it follows a group of unlikely people as they encounter a phenomenon that dissolves the illusion of isolation, revealing how kindness, attention, and mutual responsibility become essential rather than optional. Rooted in restraint and dry humor, Pluribus offers a vision of science fiction shaped by care rather than conquest — asking what becomes possible when we stop pretending we’re alone.

Gaia is a streaming platform devoted to consciousness exploration, spiritual inquiry, and alternative perspectives on reality. Its library spans meditation, yoga, ancient civilizations, metaphysics, healing modalities, and expanded states of awareness, functioning less as a single viewpoint and more as a broad archive beyond mainstream narratives. Best approached intuitively, Gaia invites curiosity over belief — explore what resonates, leave what doesn’t, and engage with consciousness as a lived experience rather than a fixed theory