Nosferatu A Symphony of Horror 2023 - Movies (Nov 3rd)
Do You Want to Die in Indio 2024 - Movies (Nov 3rd)
The Beast Below 2023 - Movies (Nov 3rd)
Operation Hope - The Children Lost in the Amazon 2024 - Movies (Nov 3rd)
Rust 3 2024 - Movies (Nov 3rd)
Witches Well 2024 - Movies (Nov 3rd)
Our Holiday Story 2024 - Movies (Nov 3rd)
Heightened 2023 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
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Hounds of War 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Knox Goes Away 2023 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
A Quiet Place Day One 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
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Here 2024 - Movies (Nov 3rd)
A Christmas of Wonders 2024 - Movies (Nov 3rd)
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A Carol for Two 2024 - Movies (Nov 2nd)
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Once Upon a Time in the East 2024 - Movies (Nov 2nd)
Rich House, Poor House - (Nov 3rd)
Tipping Point- Lucky Stars - (Nov 3rd)
Beyond- UFOS and the Unknown - (Nov 3rd)
Strictly Come Dancing- It Takes Two - (Nov 3rd)
Alex Witt Reports - (Nov 3rd)
60 Minutes - (Nov 3rd)
Lucky - (Nov 3rd)
Missing - (Nov 3rd)
Be My Guest with Ina Garten - (Nov 3rd)
Saturday Kitchen Best Bites - (Nov 3rd)
Sunday Brunch - (Nov 3rd)
Invincible Fight Girl - (Nov 3rd)
Dispatches - (Nov 3rd)
MotoGP Unlimited - (Nov 3rd)
The Kelly Clarkson Show - (Nov 3rd)
Earth Odyssey with Dylan Dreyer - (Nov 3rd)
Harlem Globetrotters- Play It Forward - (Nov 3rd)
Krempoli - A Place For Wild Children - (Nov 3rd)
Until I Kill You - (Nov 3rd)
Dessert Masters - (Nov 3rd)
13 year old Lili fights to protect her dog Hagen, and is devastated when her father sets Hagen free on the streets. Still innocently believing love can conquer any difficulty, Lili sets out to save her dog. Failing in his desperate efforts to find his beloved owner, Hagen joins a canine revolt leading a revolution against their human abusers.
The way home for Aleksandr Rekhviashvili is not charted in the conventional sense. It takes the viewer along some peculiar roads and across a unique landscape: Georgian history and legend, politics and social stratification, religion and ethics. Allusive, stylized and allegorical from beginning to end, his long-banned The Way Home is in part a tribute to Rekhviashvili’s favorite director, Pasolini, especially to The Hawks and the Sparrows (1966). Together with the short film Nutsa (1971) and the widely acclaimed Georgian Chronicle of the 19th Century (1979; SFIFF 1983), The Way Home closes a triptych of films that represent Rekhviashvili’s poetic contemplation of Georgia’s past. It makes extensive use of poems by Bella Akhmadulina (the major female poet of the cultural ‘thaw’ of the ’50s and ’60s and a Georgian by descent), and of sets by Amir Kakabadze. Like other films in the trilogy, The Way Home is stunningly photographed in black-and-white.-Oxymoron
The war is over. Once a young sculptor, and now a soldier, he returned home. Married, there were children. In search of work, he was hired to make grave monuments. Time passed... At one time, visiting a cemetery with friends, he saw with different eyes all his work done over the years...
In this dreamlike film, a nameless father and his son, Aleksei, live together in an apartment in St. Petersburg. Aleksei's mother has died and consequently the two have a very close relationship. When Aleksei acquires a girlfriend, she refuses to take a back seat to his bond with his dad, and breaks up with him. Aleksei is also experiencing nightmares, dreading separation from his father to be a part of the military as his father was.
A poetized chronicle of the events taking place in one of the Georgian villages in the late 19th century, when, to save a forest, the innumerous intelligentsia could rally the people and oppose the industrialists…
The short film (conveyed in a parable-like story structure) follows a man devoted to himself and the blessings of his attributed god. He struggles to survive a primitive life and is forced to take action to ensure his own prosperity.
This film ballad is dedicated to those who never returned home from WW2. A group of retreating Soviet soldiers, crossing a lunar terrain in a desperate attempt to escape death, is attacked by a German fighter plane that appears like a bolt from the blue. One by one they are killed. Then suddenly, in an unlikely denouement bordering on the mystical, the attacker is shot down with a simple rifle. For ideological reasons that defy understanding this film, one of Viktor Hres’ earliest works, was shelved in 1967 by Soviet censors. In 2010, it was restored by the Debut Studio of the Oleksander Dovzhenko Film Studio with the support of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism of Ukraine.
Banned in the Soviet Union for its "negative" content and never released, Kalatozov was forced to retreat from filmmaking for seven years because of this film. The film sets out to illustrate the old adage, "For want of a nail, the battle was lost," showing how the inferior quality of something so trivial as a nail in a soldier's boot leads inexorably to the capture of an armored train. Kalatozov had intended to demonstrate the crucial and universal importance of efficiency in Soviet industry, but the government decided that his fable gave a negative impression of the Red Army's capabilities.