Title view
Loading the full title card with cast, trailers, and watch options in a more cinematic frame.
Playback ready
Setting the watch room so the player, controls, and next clicks feel fast and dramatic.
Every year we spend £300 million on vitamin supplements, but do they actually do us any good? Some believe they offer the promise of preventing or even curing some of the world's biggest killers, such as heart disease and cancer. Others claim that taking large doses of some vitamins may in certain cases be harmful. So what are the facts? Nearly 40 years ago, one of the greatest scientists of the 20th century and double Nobel Prize winner, Linus Pauling, revolutionised the way people thought about vitamins. He claimed that by taking huge doses of vitamin C you could prevent or even cure the common cold. He predicted that if everybody followed his advice, the common cold could even be eradicated. Many scientists dismissed his theory as quackery, but the public loved it and it helped launch a huge industry. But the latest evidence shows the great man was mistaken. Vitamin C can help you once have got a cold, but for most people it does nothing to prevent you from catching one in the first place. Even if large doses of vitamin C do not prevent the common cold, some claim that it can still offer a more profound benefit. It is one of a group of vitamins called anti-oxidants that some believe can prevent illnesses such as cancer, Alzheimer's and heart disease. In 2004, scientists in the United States claimed that people could be missing any of the potential benefits of taking one of the world's most popular anti-oxidant vitamin supplements, vitamin E, because their bodies might not be absorbing it. But our own investigation suggested that the American scientists' conclusion could be mistaken. While most safety experts believe that vitamins C and E can be taken safely even in quite large doses, there is worrying evidence that one form of another common vitamin, vitamin A, could be linked to osteoporosis, a debilitating bone disease. If the theory is right it means that a person's diet, or some supplements that they take every day to improve their health, could actually be slowly and silently weakening their bones.
Playback servers
Subflix keeps extra fallback servers tucked away by default, and if one stalls it will still try the next available option.
Now playing
Strong fallback server when you want a second path ready without leaving the page.
If the provider's own fullscreen button throws an error, use Subflix fullscreen or open the player in its own tab.
Playback mode
Playback continues in a dedicated viewer designed to keep the watch experience simple and steady.
Cast And Share
These providers run inside an external iframe, so the most reliable casting flow is to open the player in its own tab and use your browser or device cast controls there.
Preparing your player
MoviesAPI is loading in the watch shell. If it takes too long, Subflix will offer another server.
Watch state
Resume tracking and recent activity only sync for signed-in profiles.
Sign in to syncEpisode 10: The Truth of Troy