Draculas Ex-Girlfriend 2024 - Movies (Sep 23rd)
It Ends with Us 2024 - Movies (Sep 23rd)
What You Wish For 2023 - Movies (Sep 23rd)
Speak No Evil 2024 - Movies (Sep 23rd)
Hellboy The Crooked Man 2024 - Movies (Sep 23rd)
The Substance 2024 - Movies (Sep 23rd)
Transformers One 2024 - Movies (Sep 23rd)
The Damned 2024 - Movies (Sep 22nd)
Peak Season 2023 - Movies (Sep 22nd)
Something in the Water 2024 - Movies (Sep 22nd)
Cold Betrayal 2024 - Movies (Sep 22nd)
Falling Together 2024 - Movies (Sep 22nd)
The Thicket 2024 - Movies (Sep 21st)
Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes 2024 - Movies (Sep 21st)
Violett 2023 - Movies (Sep 22nd)
Wilding 2023 - Movies (Sep 22nd)
EFC 2024 - Movies (Sep 22nd)
Sapien 2024 - Movies (Sep 21st)
The 13th Summer 2024 - Movies (Sep 21st)
From Russia with Lev 2024 - Movies (Sep 21st)
Despicable Me 4 2024 - Movies (Sep 21st)
Andrea Mitchell Reports - (Sep 23rd)
The Wives - (Sep 23rd)
Katy Tur Reports - (Sep 23rd)
Chris Jansing Reports - (Sep 23rd)
Mozart- Rise of a Genius - (Sep 23rd)
Married at First Sight UK - (Sep 23rd)
Richard Osmans House of Games - (Sep 23rd)
Police Interceptors - (Sep 23rd)
The One Show - (Sep 23rd)
The Chase - (Sep 23rd)
Help We Bought A Village - (Sep 23rd)
Epleslang - (Sep 23rd)
Panorama - (Sep 23rd)
Escape to the Country - (Sep 23rd)
Open House NYC - (Sep 23rd)
Sempre al tuo fianco - (Sep 23rd)
Garden Rescue - (Sep 23rd)
No Gain No Love - (Sep 23rd)
The Cook Up with Adam Liaw - (Sep 23rd)
Inside with Jen Psaki - (Sep 23rd)
“Let’s see if you gained any weight. 26,3 kilogram. Ahmet, you need to eat more. Double meals.” Like other boys their age, Baran, Ahmet and their classmates wrestle with the desire for recognition, with homesickness and with their target weights. Most of all though, they wrestle with, and against, one another. They are comrades and competitors, united by one and the same dream: Olympic gold! In their wrestling academy in the Turkish province of Amasya, which is well known for this traditional form of combat sport, they undergo strength and endurance training, they learn lifts and throws, they urge each other on and they console one another. Always responding to the boys’ needs, the trainers give the boys tough love, sometimes fatherly, sometimes strict and disciplinary. The film’s intimate documental camera bears close witness to the fine line between friendship and competition, victory and the lesson of how to lose.
Tommy Seebach Mortensen; or just Tommy Seebach to the whole nation; were born in Copenhagen in 1949 and passed away far too early in 2003. "Tommy" received four stars out of six by Politiken,[6] Berlingske Tidende[7] and Ekstra Bladet;[8] B.T. awarded it six stars out of six.[9] Dagbladet Information described it as "... a story of an artist who became a victim of the musical genre which he himself had helped innovate, and who, instead of gaining the broad recognition he had longed for his entire life, ended up with a status somewhere in between national heritage and kitsch clown..."[10] Politiken called the film "worthy, worth seeing and moving", Ekstra Bladet "a moving portrait of a man caught between the music, his family and the bottle".
A multi-awarded 23 minute short film about pansexual punk rockers in a toxic relationship in London’s underground music scene
In this portrait film, we meet Inger Christensen in her apartment in Østerbro, Copenhagen, where she tells of her life and work, and reads excerpts from her major works.
Starting as a documentary on the sexually liberated culture of late-Sixties Denmark, Sexual Freedom in Denmark winds up incorporating major elements of the marriage manual form and even manages to squeeze in a montage of beaver loops and erotic art. All narrated with earnest pronouncements concerning the social and psychological benefits of sexual liberation, the movie, is a kind of mondo film dotted with occasional glimpses of actual sex.
The story about Danish national football (soccer) team, a traditional minnow until the mid-1980s when they improved dramatically and eventually went on to win the European championship in 1992.
At the end of the Cold War, something new arised that should influence an entire generation and express their attitude to life. It started with an idea in the underground subculture of Berlin shortly before the fall of the Wall. With the motto "Peace, Joy, Pancakes", Club DJ Dr. Motte and companions launched the first Love Parade. A procession registered as political demonstration with only 150 colorfully dressed people dancing to house and techno. What started out small developed over the years into the largest party on the planet with visitors from all over the world. In 1999, 1.5 million people took part. With the help of interviews with important organizers and contemporary witnesses, the documentary reflects the history of the Love Parade, but also illuminates the dark side of how commerce and money business increasingly destroyed the real spirit, long before the emigration to other cities and the Love Parade disaster of Duisburg in 2010, which caused an era to end in deep grief.
The intention of the film is to give an impression of what small exotic Denmark looks like, what the strange Danes look like and how they are. Nearly 100 Danes are presented in the film, amongst them a racing cyclist, a Minister of Finance, a popular actor and 13 unmarried women from a provincial town. "There is too much fogginess and rain and melancholy in most of the pictures of Denmark," says Jørgen Leth. "But not in my film. I would like to show you some authentic, clear and beautiful pictures from this strange country."
Shot in a single day, POSERS captures a thriving subculture in Kings Road, London: the style, music, and expression of the New Romantics.
Some groups of skaters are classified as teams. At Globe there are only riders. Riders who define skateboarding through their unique character and perspectives on their world. Opinion, skateboarding: to each his own.
Hello, My Name Is Lesbian shows modern lesbian lifestyle and culture in all it’s diversity as it is lived in one of the most sexually liberated countries in the world. Set against historic footage from the last five decades, women aging from 19 to 84, share their views on sex, family gatherings, parental roles, night life and careers: every facet of the lives we lead, viewed through the eyes of women who have chosen identities departing from the norm.