Harbour Rights unveils slate of new titles for 2022

Harbour Rights unveils slate of new titles for 2022

'Combat Approved' is renewed for another season on Defence TV.

Harbour Rights

Mumbai: Harbour Rights, a TV distribution company based in Hong Kong has unveiled its content slate for this year.

The company has licensed another season of "Combat Approved" to Defence TV channel by Viettel Media in Vietnam. The series provides an insider look at Russia’s most advanced military equipment on land and sea, as well as in the air.

Japanese broadcaster NHK has picked up a biography of one of the most famed and sought-after film stars in the world - "Leonardo DiCaprio: Most Wanted!" - that unveils the secret of how Leonardo lived his dreams to step into Hollywood's limelight and make film history with an iron will and natural talent. From the same producer, a new biopic release on an icon of the 90s, Winona Ryder - "Fighting Demons."

Metro TV has acquired 10 episodes of the series - "Face To Face" for the Indonesian audiences. Each episode features the rivalry of 2 well-known figures in diverse fields of technology, economy or arts and how their confrontation have often changed society and deeply impacted our lives.

Filmart 2022 is coming up next month, Harbour Rights will be joining the virtual event online. And we are thrilled to introduce our new cultural titles "Champs-Elysees," "The Avenue of A Thousand Secrets" and "Tomorrowland Summer." The former series unveils the backstage and unknown places of the most famous avenue in the world; while the latter takes us behind the scenes of the biggest techno festival in the world.

The upcoming science and environment titles include "Dear Plastic" which tells the love-hate relationship between man and plastic; "Kelp - A Forest Under The Sea" investigates the history, economic and scientific potential of kelp to build a new type of sustainable agriculture, maintain biodiversity or fight global warming.

Last but not least, the recent pandemic has made us aware of how vulnerable we are facing new and ever-evolving viruses, we might presume we are more equipped to fight against bacterial infection which we are much more familiar with. "The Silent Pandemic" - a new science investigation unveils the fact that bacteria are developing resistance to existing antibiotics and their potential to upend our health system.