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Harbour Rights bolsters summer content lineup with new titles

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Mumbai: Hong Kong-based TV distribution company Harbour Rights has licensed three new wildlife titles to Canal+ Myanmar, including “Wild Caribbean,” “A Wild Quest In Scotland,” and “Becoming Butterfly.” The first episode of the collection focuses on the world of insects and bugs with the upcoming episodes that include “Realm of the Ants” and “Black Bees: Season 4.”

Tokyovision acquired its social investigation “China, My Wife Has Social Credit” which unveils the newly introduced social credit system in China and how it affects intimate and social relationships, as well as “Oriental Express: The Ultimate Train Experience,” which is about a luxurious journey from Bangkok to Singapore on one of the most beautiful trains in the world. Both titles will be part of the special Nippon TV show “World Greatest TV.”

NATV in Korea was interested in the development of civilisations that reflect on the evolution of nature and humanity throughout the world and acquiring “The Path of Men.”

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Just before French president Emmanuel Macron won his second term in office this week, newly launched Taiwan Plus acquired Macron’s “Road To Elysee” and “Brigitte Macron, A French Saga.”

The former tells the inside story of how Macron came to power without the backing of a traditional political party in 2016, the latter reviews the secret side of France’s first lady, that made a name for herself in the political world.

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Documentary

Stripes on Screen as BBC Player Roars with Tiger Day Special

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MUMBAI: From Ranthambore with roar. This World Tiger Day, BBC Player is sinking its claws into the untamed heart of India with Legendary Tigers of India, a gripping documentary that prowls onto screens this Independence Day, 15 August . Narrated by the late, legendary conservationist Valmik Thapar, the film is more than just stripes and stares. It’s a moving chronicle of survival, strength, and the shifting story of India’s national animal. Thapar, one of the world’s foremost tiger experts, spent a full monsoon-to-monsoon year tracking a new generation of Bengal tigers deep within Ranthambore, one of India’s most iconic tiger reserves.

With intimate access and five decades of experience behind the lens and in the wild, Thapar offers rare glimpses of tigers not just as apex predators, but as emotionally complex, intuitive creatures navigating shrinking habitats and growing human presence.

The film roars to life from Thapar’s own jungle home at the forest’s edge, blending dramatic visuals with a deeply personal narrative. From mother cub dynamics to solitary alpha males, the documentary captures the instinctual ballet of survival, mating, territoriality and raw jungle drama woven through the lens of ecological urgency and reverence.

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Premiering exclusively on BBC Player in India via Tata Play Binge and Prime Video (add-on subscription required), this special release is BBC’s tribute to India’s tiger legacy. With India currently home to more than 70 per cent of the world’s wild tigers 3,682, as per the 2023 census the documentary feels both timely and timeless.

In an age of noisy content, Legendary Tigers of India invites audiences to pause, listen, and marvel. Not just at the majesty of the tiger, but at a conservation journey that began with 1,411 tigers in 2006 and roared back in triumph. This isn’t just a documentary. It’s a call to protect what still prowls.

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