Branching Out 2024 - Movies (Apr 28th)
The Assembly 2024 - Movies (Apr 28th)
Dora Say Hola to Adventure! 2023 - Movies (Apr 28th)
Boy Kills World 2023 - Movies (Apr 28th)
Curious Caterer Foiled Plans 2024 - Movies (Apr 27th)
Robert De Niro Hiding in the Spotlight 2023 - Movies (Apr 27th)
Clockwork Orange The Prophecy 2023 - Movies (Apr 27th)
Madame Web 2024 - Movies (Apr 27th)
Mean Girls 2024 - Movies (Apr 27th)
The Fall Guy 2024 - Movies (Apr 27th)
The Idea of You 2024 - Movies (Apr 27th)
The Doomsday Cult of Antares de la Luz 2024 - Movies (Apr 25th)
Sayen The Hunter 2024 - Movies (Apr 26th)
You Can Call Me Bill 2023 - Movies (Apr 27th)
Breaking Olympia The Phil Heath Story 2024 - Movies (Apr 26th)
Cash Out 2024 - Movies (Apr 26th)
Infested 2023 - Movies (Apr 26th)
All India Rank 2023 - Movies (Apr 26th)
Hack Your Health The Secrets of Your Gut 2024 - Movies (Apr 26th)
Humane 2024 - Movies (Apr 26th)
Possessions 2024 - Movies (Apr 25th)
The SmackDown LowDown - (Apr 28th)
Blue Ridge - (Apr 28th)
Krempoli - A Place For Wild Children - (Apr 28th)
Earth Odyssey with Dylan Dreyer - (Apr 28th)
Ninja Kamui - (Apr 28th)
Horrible Histories - (Apr 28th)
LEGO Masters - (Apr 28th)
All Elite Wrestling- Rampage - (Apr 28th)
Harlem Globetrotters- Play It Forward - (Apr 28th)
The Kelly Clarkson Show - (Apr 28th)
ROH On HonorClub - (Apr 28th)
All Elite Wrestling- Collision - (Apr 28th)
Marvels Spidey and His Amazing Friends - (Apr 28th)
Comedy Class by Éric and Ramzy - (Apr 28th)
Restoration Road With Clint Harp - (Apr 28th)
Homegrown - (Apr 28th)
The Only Way Is Essex - (Apr 28th)
Cold Justice - (Apr 28th)
Kill la Kill - (Apr 28th)
Critter Fixers- Country Vets - (Apr 28th)
“Nicky is seven. His parents are older and meaner.” A Place Called Lovely references the types of violence individuals find in life, from actual beatings, accidents and murders, to the more insidious violence of lies, social expectations, and betrayed faith. Benning collects images of this socially-pervasive violence from a variety of sources, tracing events from childhood: movies, tabloids, children's games (like mumbledy-peg), personal experiences, and those of others. Throughout, Benning uses small toys as props and examples—handling and controlling them the way we are, in turn, controlled by larger violent forces.
Luks Glück is a tragicomedy about the dubious happiness of a Turkish family between Hamburg and Istanbul, whose life by a lottery win out of joint.
As a visually radical memoir, CAMERAPERSON draws on the remarkable footage that filmmaker Kirsten Johnson has shot and reframes it in ways that illuminate moments and situations that have personally affected her. What emerges is an elegant meditation on the relationship between truth and the camera frame, as Johnson transforms scenes that have been presented on Festival screens as one kind of truth into another kind of story—one about personal journey, craft, and direct human connection.
In this horrifyingly modern fairytale lurks an online Boogeyman and two 12-year-old girls who would kill for him. The entrance to the internet quickly leads to its darkest basement. How responsible are our children for what they find there?
In the period 1891-1927, Henriette Roland Holst goes through a dramatic development. As an aspiring poet from an affluent bourgeois milieu she throws herself, full with idealism and conviction, into the labour movement. Within the various socialistic parties however, a fierce battle on direction takes place, wherein Henriette has trouble finding her place. After returning disillusioned from a trip to the Soviet Union, she does not feel at home in any leftist party. Later she will recollect on this period in her biography "Het vuur brandde voort" (translation: "The fire rages on"). The film reconstructs this period with the use of old film material combined with texts by Henriette Roland Holst herself: fragments from letters, poems, speeches and books, sparingly supplemented with personal commentary by the filmmaker.
Lonely. It could be you. It could be me. There are millions of us out there. The headlines call this 'The Age of Loneliness'. They say it's a major public health issue. A silent epidemic that's starting to kill us. But we don't want to talk about it. No-one really wants to admit they are lonely. Award-winning film-maker Sue Bourne believes loneliness has to be talked about. It affects so many of us in so many different ways and at so many different stages of our lives. So she went out to find people brave enough to go on camera and talk about their loneliness. The Age of Loneliness has people of all ages in it, from Isobel the 19-year-old student to Olive the feisty 100-year-old, Ben the divorcee, Jaye the 40-year-old singleton, Richard the 72-year-old internet-dating widower, to Martin, Iain and Christine talking about their mental health problems. Everyone talks with such remarkable honesty and bravery that you can't help but be touched by their stories.
Documentary on the civil rights activist, Viola Liuzzo, who was murdered in 1965 as she campaigned for black suffrage in Selma, Alabama, and its effect on her family.
A documentary about a group of pilgrims who travel to Nepal to worship at the legendary Manakamana temple.
A story about childhood - real and the dreams. After finding a magic shell young Kačenka uses it to model her family life on the sea shore.
Shut Up and Sing is a documentary about the country band from Texas called the Dixie Chicks and how one tiny comment against President Bush dropped their number one hit off the charts and caused fans to hate them, destroy their CD’s, and protest at their concerts. A film about freedom of speech gone out of control and the three girls lives that were forever changed by a small anti-Bush comment