Found 11 movies, 8 TV shows, and 0 people
Can't find what you're looking for?

No description available for this show.

"War of Roses" is a story about love quarrels people make in the course of finding their love. This series will surely bring smiles and touch the heart of the audience. Two different sisters with two different values about love. It takes place in a obstetrics & gynecology hospital. Naturally, a lot of information related to women ranging from pregnancy to delivery is also provided and sure to catch the women audience in their twenties up to sixties.

Twenty years ago, Li Jie was expelled after rejecting her professor’s advances and being falsely accused. She changed her name to Li Yiming and raised her daughter, Li Anle. When CEO Sun Shanjun assaults Anle, Li Yiming uncovers connections to her past, uniting the women to confront their trauma and expose the truth.

No description available for this show.

Gu Nian was a full-time housewife leading a happy life until her husband becomes involved in a criminal case and gets exposed for infidelity.

A series of British television films featuring William Shakespeare's History Plays.

Set against the backdrop of the Wars of the Roses, the series is the story of the women caught up in the protracted conflict for the throne of England.

The Wars of the Roses was a 1963 theatrical adaptation of William Shakespeare's first historical tetralogy (1 Henry VI, 2 Henry VI, 3 Henry VI & Richard III), which deals with the conflict between the House of Lancaster & the House of York over the throne of England, a conflict known as the Wars of the Roses. The plays were adapted by John Barton, and directed by Barton himself & Peter Hall at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre. The plays were heavily politicized, with Barton and Hall allowing numerous contemporaneous events of the early 1960s to inform their adaptation. The production was a huge critical & commercial success, and is generally regarded as revitalizing the reputation of the Henry VI plays in the modern theatre. Many critics feel The Wars of the Roses set a standard for future productions of the tetralogy which has yet to be surpassed. The 1965 broadcast was so successful that they were shown again, as 11 episodes, each 50 minutes long, in 1966.