The Girl in the Pool 2024 - Movies (Jun 1st)
Spit 2025 - Movies (Jun 1st)
Freaky Tales 2024 - Movies (Jun 1st)
Flow 2024 - Movies (Jun 1st)
Battle for Castle Itter 2025 - Movies (Jun 1st)
Tom Daley 1.6 Seconds of Glory 2025 - Movies (Jun 1st)
England’s Lions The New Generation 2025 - Movies (Jun 1st)
The Severed Sun 2024 - Movies (Jun 1st)
The Encampments 2025 - Movies (Jun 1st)
Without a Name 2025 - Movies (May 31st)
Final Destination Bloodlines 2025 - Movies (May 31st)
Theres a Zombie Outside 2024 - Movies (May 31st)
Mountainhead 2025 - Movies (May 31st)
The Pickleball Exorcist 2025 - Movies (May 31st)
The Blinkless 2024 - Movies (May 31st)
Call of the Void 2025 - Movies (May 31st)
A RAD Documentary 2025 - Movies (May 30th)
Queer 2024 - Movies (May 30th)
Bring Her Back 2025 - Movies (May 30th)
Daylight to Dark 2024 - Movies (May 30th)
Into The Gravel Pit 2025 - Movies (May 30th)
Later... with Jools Holland - (Jun 1st)
999- On the Front Line - (Jun 1st)
Alex Witt Reports - (Jun 1st)
Lazarus - (Jun 1st)
Celebrity Catchphrase - (Jun 1st)
I Kissed a Boy - (Jun 1st)
The Last American Vagabond - (Jun 1st)
The Chocolate Queen - (Jun 1st)
Tragedies involontaires - (Jun 1st)
Traqueur de chars - (Jun 1st)
Strife - (Jun 1st)
My Music with Rhiannon Giddens - (Jun 1st)
Lucky - (Jun 1st)
Good Boy - (Jun 1st)
Not Her First Rodeo - (Jun 1st)
Karine and the Yellow House - (Jun 1st)
Gruen Nation - (Jun 1st)
Billion Dollar Playground - (Jun 1st)
Our Unwritten Seoul - (Jun 1st)
The Walking Dead- Dead City - (Jun 1st)
This is not merely another film about cinema history; it is a film about the love of cinema, a journey of discovery through over a century of German film history. Ten people working in film today remember their favourite films of yesteryear.
An insider's account of Jack Warner, a founding father of the American film industry. This feature length documentary provides the rags to riches story of the man whose studio - Warner Bros - created many of Hollywood's most classic films. Includes extensive interviews with family members and friends, film clips, rare home movies and unique location footage.
How could the Cannes Film Festival become the biggest cinema event in the world? For 75 years, Cannes has succeeded in this prodigy of placing cinema, its sometimes paltry splendors but also its requirements of great modern art, at the center of everything, as if, for ten days in May, nothing was more important than it. This film tells how Cannes has become the largest film festival in the world by opening up to cinematic modernity while never forgetting that cinema remains a performing art, a popular art.
In the late sixties, Spanish cinema began to produce a huge amount of horror genre films: international markets were opened, the production was continuous, a small star-system was created, as well as a solid group of specialized directors. Although foreign trends were imitated, Spanish horror offered a particular approach to sex, blood and violence. It was an extremely unusual artistic movement in Franco's Spain.
This promotional short film for "Soylent Green" (1973) begins by showing clips of films that depicted what the future might be like beyond Earth. The narrator then discusses the origin of the idea depicted in "Soylent Green." Director Richard Fleischer and star Charlton Heston discuss how an upcoming crowd scene will be filmed. Then we see what happens when the crowd riots because there is not enough food available to be distributed to everyone. "Soylent Green" was Edward G. Robinson's 101st (and, as it turned out, his last) feature film. During a break in filming, the cast and crew hold a ceremony celebrating the first film of his "second hundred," and Robinson makes appreciative remarks to the crowd. Studio head Jack L. Warner and friend George Burns are among those in attendance.
A television documentary on the life and career of British film director David Lean. Scenes of Lean directing are intercut with personal interviews in which the director explains his methods, the beginnings of his career, and his relationships with actors and actresses.
A chronicle of the production problems — including bad weather, actors' health, war near the filming locations, and more — which plagued the filming of Apocalypse Now, increasing costs and nearly destroying the life and career of Francis Ford Coppola.