A Quiet Place Day One 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Cabrini 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Return of the King The Fall and Rise of Elvis Presley 2024 - Movies (Nov 13th)
Hot Frosty 2024 - Movies (Nov 13th)
Dogleg 2023 - Movies (Nov 13th)
Fight to Live 2024 - Movies (Nov 13th)
Killer Ex 2024 - Movies (Nov 13th)
Old Man Jackson 2023 - Movies (Nov 13th)
The Girl with the Fork 2024 - Movies (Nov 13th)
Devon 2024 - Movies (Nov 12th)
Christmas Love and Fudge 2024 - Movies (Nov 12th)
Made in England The Films of Powell and Pressburger 2024 - Movies (Nov 12th)
Adrienne Iapalucci The Dark Queen 2024 - Movies (Nov 12th)
In Restless Dreams The Music of Paul Simon 2023 - Movies (Nov 12th)
Lets Start A Cult 2024 - Movies (Nov 12th)
What We Find on the Road 2024 - Movies (Nov 12th)
The Burden of Nine Lives 2024 - Movies (Nov 12th)
Do Not Open 2024 - Movies (Nov 12th)
The Exorcism 2024 - Movies (Nov 12th)
Larger than Life Reign of the Boybands 2024 - Movies (Nov 12th)
Another Happy Day 2023 - Movies (Nov 12th)
Are You Smarter Than a Celebrity - (Nov 13th)
Road Wars - (Nov 13th)
Love Is Blind- Argentina - (Nov 13th)
Gangnam B-Side - (Nov 13th)
Caught in the Act- Unfaithful - (Nov 13th)
The Bay - (Oct 2nd)
Seoul Busters - (Oct 2nd)
Unsolved Mysteries - (Oct 2nd)
The Kelly Clarkson Show - (Oct 2nd)
SPRINT - (Nov 13th)
The Martin Lewis Money Show - (Nov 13th)
Interior Design Masters with Alan Carr - (Nov 13th)
Unbelievable Moments Caught on Camera - (Nov 13th)
American Sports Story - (Nov 13th)
Ink Master - (Nov 13th)
The Last American Vagabond - (Nov 13th)
Ride of Your Life With Courtney Hansen - (Nov 13th)
1000-lb Sisters - (Nov 13th)
Dark Side of Reality TV - (Nov 13th)
1000-lb Best Friends - (Nov 13th)
'Afloat' is an experimental film that paints a portrait of Japanese performance artist: Ayumi Lanoire. The film opens as a telephone call between Ayumi and Person X, which meanders the audience through the various layers that make up her personas leading one to wonder whether she is in fact a myth or reality.
a 32-minute color film by Gwen Brown, featuring precious footage of Living Theatre productions “Mysteries” and smaller pieces, “Paradise Now” and “Frankenstein.” “The fusion of Brown’s freewheeling direct cinema and the Living Theatre’s performance for revolutionary change (amidst the heydays of both) unite as a dynamic concoction of the era, yielding for the viewer a shifting terrain of both critical insight and ecstatic zeal, not as a vacant nostalgia for a pre-commodified radicality, but as tactical inspiration for future days.” – Andrew Wilson (Artist’s Access Television)
Köner uses sequences of images from webcams as raw material. People and their vehicles appear acoustically, but not visually. The shift from day to night and the influence of the weather gives motion to the segments. He condenses a total of 3,000 individual web images taken from the Internet into one scene. Despite the cinematic motion of the image, it seems like a still photo.
A documentary like no other. Starting with the bizarre practices and fantasies of a group of filmmakers working under the label Experimental Film Society, it spins off into a manifesto of light and sound. This dazzling journey through a view of cinema as cosmic ritual and erotic delirium is also an idiosyncratic celebration of the medium itself. Rouzbeh Rashidi’s ornate visual style unleashes a parade of visionary scenes that redefine movie magic as a fevered hallucination.
A viral video shows a mysterious figure walking along the edge of the woods each day, and filmmaker Bill Howard sets out to spend a night there to find out exactly what it is.
Godard by Godard is an archival self-portrait of Jean-Luc Godard. It retraces the unique and unheard-of path, made up of sudden detours and dramatic returns, of a filmmaker who never looks back on his past, never makes the same film twice, and tirelessly pursues his research, in a truly inexhaustible diversity of inspiration. Through Godard’s words, his gaze and his work, the film tells the story of a life of cinema; that of a man who will always demand a lot of himself and his art, to the point of merging with it.
A fragmented look into the memories of two strangers from the same hometown, brought together through a university project.
X-ray images were invented in 1895, the same year in which the Lumière brothers presented their respective invention in what today is considered to be the first cinema screening. Thus, both cinema and radiography fall within the scopic regime inaugurated by modernity. The use of X-rays on two sculptures from the Bilbao Fine Arts Museum generates images that reveal certain elements of them that would otherwise be invisible to our eyes. These images, despite being generally created for technical or scientific purposes, seem to produce a certain form of 'photogénie': they lend the radiographed objects a new appearance that lies somewhere between the material and the ethereal, endowing them with a vaporous and spectral quality. It is not by chance that physics and phantasmagoria share the term 'spectrum' in their vocabulary.
Passing vignettes of the lives of workers and citizens, what home means to them, and inter-city transportation...