Midweek free documentary movie alert

Paul Martin
Naked.

We have bonus free movies for you good people to insert directly into your ravenous brains today. Six documentaries are on the menu, with good, long, hard looks being taken at '80s British punk collective Crass, fashion designers Viktor & Rolf, and an American searching for a sense of home.

First up is Viktor & Rolf: Because We're Worth It, in which the clothes-designing doppelgangers are followed by the cameras for a whole year. And what a year! Strewth! From their exhibition at the Louvre in 2004, to building up to the launch of their perfume and catwalk collection in autumn in 2005, it's a wonder that they still find time to wash their cars, vacuum their carpets, and take their dogs for walkies.

Satellite Queens is about Kalaam Nawaem, a groundbreaking discussion show presented by four women: one Lebanese, one Palestinian, one Egyptian and one Saudi Arabian. Now that might sound like the start of a bad - or at least very obscure - joke, but there is nothing funny about Satellite Queens, as it examines the effect of non-government controlled satellite TV on Arab culture, and the lives of its presenters.

Viktor & Rolf Because We're Worth It.

Amusement is however on the agenda in Naked; a collection of amusing personal stories about puberty, told by children between the ages of 10-13 and illustrated with quirky animations.

Chris Keulemans is the star of The American I Never Was. He characterises himself as being a “third culture kid” during his formative years, growing up in a number of different countries, always imagining he was really from New Jersey, USA. The American I Never Was is a road movie told in stills, detailing the journey of a man trying to discover the beauty and sense of home that he never had.

There's No Authority offers a brief history of Crass, the avowedly political British punk collective, who were active between 1977 and 1984. Told using interviews and archive footage, it looks at the Crass manifesto, as well as offering musings on the Thatchergate hoax, a recruitment attempt by the KGB, and being ripped off by David Beckham.

Crass There's No Authority.

On to our final free movie of the day, and what can one say about I Love Alaska? That it deals with an AOL blunder in 2006 led to the search histories of 650,000 internet users being made public, and it is one of these histories which forms the basis of the film? Yup, that'll do.

It is universalism gone stark staringly mad today, as all films are available in all territories for all.