Wineville 2024 - Movies (Oct 6th)
Azrael 2024 - Movies (Oct 5th)
The Peasants 2023 - Movies (Oct 5th)
Girl You Know Its True 2023 - Movies (Oct 5th)
New Life 2023 - Movies (Oct 5th)
Harold and the Purple Crayon 2024 - Movies (Oct 5th)
Electric Lady Studios A Jimi Hendrix Vision 2024 - Movies (Oct 5th)
The Absence of Eden 2023 - Movies (Oct 5th)
A Sprinkle of Deceit A Hannah Swensen Mystery 2024 - Movies (Oct 5th)
Kinds of Kindness 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
Subservience 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
The Conqueror Hollywood Fallout 2023 - Movies (Oct 4th)
Its Whats Inside 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
Joker Folie à Deux 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
Spin the Bottle 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
Things Will Be Different 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
The Radleys 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
Gods Not Dead In God We Trust 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
Little Bites 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
The Killers Game 2024 - Movies (Oct 4th)
One Person One Vote 2024 - Movies (Oct 3rd)
40 y 20 - (Oct 6th)
The UnXplained - (Oct 6th)
Mission- Yozakura Family - (Oct 6th)
The Walking Dead- Daryl Dixon - (Oct 6th)
On Patrol- Live - (Oct 6th)
All Elite Wrestling- Collision - (Oct 6th)
Uzumaki - (Oct 6th)
Tomorrows World Today - (Oct 6th)
FROM - (Oct 6th)
Tulsa King - (Oct 6th)
SEAL Team - (Oct 6th)
The Voice UK - (Oct 5th)
Match of the Day - (Oct 5th)
The Sunday Show with Jonathan Capehart - (Oct 6th)
The Last American Vagabond - (Oct 6th)
Alex Witt Reports - (Oct 5th)
Celebrity Catchphrase - (Oct 5th)
Court Cam - (Oct 5th)
Cops - (Oct 5th)
The Good Stuff with Mary Berg - (Oct 5th)
An intimate portrayal of the everyday lives of Carthusian monks of the Grande Chartreuse, high in the French Alps (Chartreuse Mountains). The idea for the film was proposed to the monks in 1984, but the Carthusians said they wanted time to think about it. The Carthusians finally contacted Gröning 16 years later to say they were now willing to permit Gröning to shoot the movie, if he was still interested.
A documentary about Ibrahim Gezer, who escaped from war in Kurdistan to Switzerland. All is lost, except his love for beekeeping.
When director Daniel Schmid grew up, his parents ran a hotel in the Alps, and this singular setting was to influence his film. Rather by coincidence he came to Berlin in the early 1960s and became part of the new German wave. Schmid worked with, among others, Wenders and Fassbinder, for example as an actor in Wender’s The American Friend. He met Ingrid Caven, who was to play a diva in several of his films. This is a documentation of a part of modern European film history and a good analysis of artistry and how it corresponds to the individual behind the camera. A wealth of archival footage brings us close to many directors and actors in Schmid’s circle. If you’ve never seen a Daniel Schmid film, you are sure to want to after watching this portrait of his life.
Between 1947 and 1951, more than 80 000 Greek men, women and children were deported to the isle of Makronissos (Greece) in reeducation camps created to ‘fight the spread of Communism’. Among those exiles were a number of writers and poets, including Yannis Ritsos and Tassos Livaditis. Despite the deprivation and torture, they managed to write poems which describe the struggle for survival in this world of internment. These texts, some of them buried in the camps, were later found. «Like Lions of stone at the gateway of night» blends these poetic writings with the reeducation propaganda speeches constantly piped through the camps’ loudspeakers. Long tracking shots take us on a trance-like journey through the camp ruins, interrupted along the way by segments from photographic archives. A cinematic essay, which revives the memory of forgotten ruins and a battle lost.
In their very own ways, scientists, artists and wandering souls search in the inhospitable and mythical desert landscape for the meaning of life.
Switzerland is presently the only country in the world where suicide assistance is legal. Exit: The Right to Die profiles that nation's EXIT organization, which for over twenty years has provided volunteers who counsel and accompany the terminally-ill and severely handicapped towards a death of their choice.
(Re)immersing himself in body building, David Nicolas Parel endeavours to follow his younger brother as he trains for the Arnold Classic – Arnold, from the famous Austrian/American actor and politician. Convinced he is the one who inspired this passion, he worries about the risks this sport has on his brother’s health and aspires to strengthen their now strained bond. A film on the edge.
Max Frisch was the last big Swiss intellectual widely respected as a “voice” in its own right – a character hardly found today. The film retells Frisch’s story as a witness of the unfolding 20th century, wondering if such “voices” are needed at all, or if we could do without them.
Over 350,000 tons of highly radioactive waste and spent fuel rods are in temporary storage on site at nuclear power complexes and at intermediate storage sites all over the world. More than 10,000 additional tons join them every year. It is the most dangerous waste man has ever produced. Waste that requires storage in a safe final repository for hundreds of thousands of years. Out of reach of humanity and other living creatures. The question is, where? Together with Swiss-British nuclear physicist Charles McCombie, who has been searching for a safe final storage site for highly radioactive nuclear waste for thirty-five years, director Edgar Hagen investigates the limitations and contradictions involved in this project of global significance. Supporters and opponents of nuclear energy struggle for solutions whilst dogmatic worldviews are assailed by doubt