Furiosa A Mad Max Saga 2024 - Movies (Aug 6th)
ZEF - The Story of Die Antwoord 2024 - Movies (Aug 6th)
Robin and the Hoods 2024 - Movies (Aug 5th)
The Bikeriders 2023 - Movies (Aug 5th)
Outlaw Posse 2024 - Movies (Aug 5th)
Despicable Me 4 2024 - Movies (Aug 5th)
Dark Feathers Dance of the Geisha 2024 - Movies (Aug 5th)
Harold and the Purple Crayon 2024 - Movies (Aug 5th)
Kneecap 2024 - Movies (Aug 5th)
The Firing Squad 2024 - Movies (Aug 5th)
Joe Rogan Burn the Boats 2024 - Movies (Aug 4th)
The Typewriter and Other Headaches 2024 - Movies (Aug 4th)
The Locals 2024 - Movies (Aug 4th)
Once Upon a Time in Hollyweird 2024 - Movies (Aug 4th)
Jazz Ramsey A K-9 Mystery 2024 - Movies (Aug 4th)
Junebug 2024 - Movies (Aug 4th)
Dead Hand 2024 - Movies (Aug 4th)
Exhuma 2024 - Movies (Aug 4th)
Elizabeth Taylor The Lost Tapes 2024 - Movies (Aug 4th)
Dog 2024 - Movies (Aug 4th)
Arthur the King 2024 - Movies (Aug 3rd)
90 Day Fiance- The Other Way - (Aug 6th)
The Bold and the Beautiful - (Aug 6th)
The Young and the Restless - (Aug 6th)
BBQ Brawl - (Aug 6th)
Fatal Affairs - (Aug 6th)
The ReidOut - (Aug 6th)
Inside with Jen Psaki - (Aug 6th)
The Rachel Maddow Show - (Aug 6th)
Unexpected - (Aug 6th)
The Beat with Ari Melber - (Aug 6th)
Deadline- White House - (Aug 5th)
Emergency Room 24 Hours - (Aug 5th)
Motorway Cops- Catching Britains Speeders - (Aug 5th)
The Great House Giveaway - (Aug 5th)
MSNBC Reports Andrea Mitchell Reports - (Aug 5th)
Baddies Caribbean - (Aug 5th)
Naked and Afraid- Last One Standing - (Aug 5th)
Jonathan Ross Must-Watch Films - (Aug 5th)
Border Security- Australias Front Line - (Aug 5th)
90 Day Fiance UK - (Aug 5th)
Danish documentary filmed in Greenland. Shows a lot of Greenlanders, skiing, hunting for birds, seals and whales, and ice fishing. Filmed by Dr. Leif Folke.
A nervous, careless recording of a trip through India and Nepal at the beginning of the 1970s. Fleeting impressions of faces, landscapes, temples, people and things. Images that, having been captured in a ephemeral medium, proceed to fade away (although without aging), alongside the river of time.
A day in the city of Berlin, which experienced an industrial boom in the 1920s, and still provides an insight into the living and working conditions at that time. Germany had just recovered a little from the worst consequences of the First World War, the great economic crisis was still a few years away and Hitler was not yet an issue at the time.
This pioneering documentary film depicts the lives of the indigenous Inuit people of Canada's northern Quebec region. Although the production contains some fictional elements, it vividly shows how its resourceful subjects survive in such a harsh climate, revealing how they construct their igloo homes and find food by hunting and fishing. The film also captures the beautiful, if unforgiving, frozen landscape of the Great White North, far removed from conventional civilization.
Life on the breadline in the 1930s was hard enough, but times were desperate when you fell beneath it. Hunger marches organised by the National Unemployed Workers' Movement drew attention to the cause, but this left-wing collective picked up a cine-camera. The fictional story at the heart of the film is somewhat melodramatic, but the authentic surroundings give its message realism and weight.
The film shows a parade down Fifth Avenue, New York. In the foreground many children, both black and white, can be seen following alongside the parade. The participants in the parade include cowboys, Indians, and soldiers in the uniform of the United States Cavalry on horseback and riding horse-drawn coaches. Buffalo Bill can be seen on horseback, lifting his hat to the crowd. Filmed on 1 April 1901.
In the background is a row of three-masted sailing ships, at anchor, their sales furled. In the foreground, a simple pier that's more like a yardarm juts out above the water; about 15 boys of six or seven years of age are on the jutting wood, and they jump off into the water below. The water looks to be about three feet deep. They swim back toward the pier. A small motorized boat passes. It's a stationary camera; one take.
This scene is a part of the very first film shot produced by the Manaki Brothers. Despina, the Janaki and Milton Manaki's grandmother, was recorded weaving in one high-angle shot. For no apparent reason, the first shot made in Macedonia, in the Balkans in fact, made by these two cinematography pioneers, contains peculiar symbolics: at the moment when the grandmother Despina spins the weaving wheel, film starts rolling in our country.