Lost in Tomorrow 2023 - Movies (Sep 18th)
Strike An Uncivil War 2024 - Movies (Sep 18th)
MaXXXine 2024 - Movies (Sep 18th)
Sing Sing 2023 - Movies (Sep 18th)
The Right to Read 2023 - Movies (Sep 18th)
Spellbound 2024 - Movies (Sep 18th)
Stopping the Steal 2024 - Movies (Sep 18th)
Feet of Death 2024 - Movies (Sep 18th)
And Mrs 2024 - Movies (Sep 17th)
Dont Buy the Seller 2023 - Movies (Sep 17th)
Slingshot 2024 - Movies (Sep 17th)
Dark Feathers Dance of the Geisha 2024 - Movies (Sep 17th)
The Invisibles 2024 - Movies (Sep 17th)
Cheat 2024 - Movies (Sep 17th)
America Is Sinking 2023 - Movies (Sep 17th)
Blink Twice 2024 - Movies (Sep 17th)
Cuckoo 2024 - Movies (Sep 17th)
You Gotta Believe 2024 - Movies (Sep 17th)
Afraid 2024 - Movies (Sep 17th)
His and Hers 2024 - Movies (Sep 17th)
Death PhD 2024 - Movies (Sep 17th)
Unsellable Houses - (Sep 19th)
Help We Bought A Village - (Sep 19th)
Icons Unearthed- Harry Potter - (Sep 19th)
Expedition X - (Sep 19th)
Guys Grocery Games - (Sep 19th)
See No Evil - (Sep 19th)
Reasonable Doubt - (Sep 19th)
Frasier - (Sep 19th)
Survivor - (Sep 19th)
All in with Chris Hayes - (Sep 19th)
Alex Wagner Tonight - (Sep 19th)
The Ark - (Sep 19th)
The Beat with Ari Melber - (Sep 19th)
The ReidOut - (Sep 19th)
Agatha All Along - (Sep 19th)
The Last American Vagabond - (Sep 19th)
Trumps Heist- The President Who Wouldnt Lose - (Sep 18th)
GRAND SUMO Highlights - (Sep 18th)
Kent- Garden of England - (Sep 18th)
Celebrity Race Across the World - (Sep 18th)
Documentary about the musical and social phenomenon of Brazilian funk (or Carioca Funk), a style derived from Miami Bass, based on repetitive bass drum loops and lyrics full of sexual and violent overtones, not directly related to American funk/soul music. This style emerged in the slums and poor neighborhoods of Rio de Janeiro, and is deeply associated with the lower social classes, but is gradually being accepted on higher social circles. The film is specially interested in women's participation, focusing on its major female stars.
In this documentary by Coline Serreau, known for her feature film Why Not?, a selection of Frenchwomen in characteristically no-win situations discuss what they are experiencing and answer, if only by implication, the question: "What do women want?"
Commissioned to make a propaganda film about the 1936 Olympic Games in Germany, director Leni Riefenstahl created a celebration of the human form. This first half of her two-part film opens with a renowned introduction that compares modern Olympians to classical Greek heroes, then goes on to provide thrilling in-the-moment coverage of some of the games' most celebrated moments, including African-American athlete Jesse Owens winning a then-unprecedented four gold medals.
Commissioned to make a propaganda film about the 1936 Olympic Games in Germany, director Leni Riefenstahl created a celebration of the human form. Where the two-part epic's first half, Festival of the Nations, focused on the international aspects of the 1936 Olympic Games held in Berlin, part two, The Festival of Beauty, concentrates on individual athletes such as equestrians, gymnasts, and swimmers, climaxing with American Glenn Morris' performance in the decathalon and the games' majestic closing ceremonies.
Filmmaker Molly Gandour, in her mid-20s, returns to her childhood home in Indiana to speak with her parents in depth for the first time about her sister's death from cancer sixteen years earlier. The filmmaker comes of age as she weaves a deeply observed portrait of a family unearthing a long ago loss. Unflinching and poignant, Peanut Gallery shows us how we can transform when we begin to fill the silences between those closest to us.
This documentary chronicles Johnny Cash's 1970 visit to the White House, where Cash's emerging liberal ideals clashed with Richard Nixon's policies.
Each one of the 15 lighthouses around the island of Puerto Rico tells the story of the lighthouse keepers, wives or daughters that lived in them. Additional testimonies by architects, historians, biologists and fishermen take us on a trip of beauty, hope, perseverance around them, as we witness the magnificence of its structures and its magical surroundings. Some lighthouses are active, some have been restored, others have been abandoned but all have a unique story to tell.
"The Apology" explores the lives of former "comfort women," the more than 200,000 girls forced into sexual slavery during World War II. Today, they fight for reconciliation and justice as they struggle to make peace with the past.
Bartolomé, a teacher in a multigrade school on the mountains of Chiapas in Mexico, knows well that pedagogy is not based on textbooks and cannot fit behind the four walls of a classroom. A true sower of knowledge unravels his philosophy and method and becomes a beacon of hope for the creation of a humanistic model of education based on curiosity and love for the outside world.
British documentary filmmaker Chloe Ruthven’s grandparents were aid workers in Palestine. Growing up, she had avoided getting too involved in the subject, recalling how mention of the country made all the adults in her life angry. In her forties, after revisiting her grandmother’s book on the subject, she starts to research a documentary on the effects of foreign aid in the area and is shocked at the continued reliance on it there. Along the way she meets Lubna, a Palestinian woman who acts as her driver and fixer, and who is fiercely critical of Western aid efforts in her country. What begins as a quest to better understand her family history turns into a deeply emotional account of two women trying to understand one another. Ruthven’s determination to focus her film on deeply subjective analysis results in a unique joining of the acutely personal and complexly political. (Source: LFF programme)
Russian avant-garde filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein and German playwright Bertolt Brecht recount the brief portions of their lives they spent in Hollywood trying to make art that was both radical and popular.