Trap 2024 - Movies (Oct 19th)
The Man Who Definitely Didnt Steal Hollywood 2024 - Movies (Oct 19th)
Lies My Babysitter Told 2024 - Movies (Oct 19th)
The Turnaround 2024 - Movies (Oct 18th)
Yintah 2024 - Movies (Oct 18th)
Something in the Water 2024 - Movies (Oct 18th)
LEGO Marvel Avengers Mission Demolition 2024 - Movies (Oct 18th)
Rippy 2024 - Movies (Oct 18th)
Happiness Is 2024 - Movies (Oct 18th)
Woman of the Hour 2023 - Movies (Oct 18th)
Die Alone 2024 - Movies (Oct 18th)
Lee 2023 - Movies (Oct 18th)
Bagman 2024 - Movies (Oct 18th)
The Stoic 2024 - Movies (Oct 18th)
Fanatical The Catfishing of Tegan and Sara 2024 - Movies (Oct 18th)
Deadpool and Wolverine 2024 - Movies (Oct 17th)
Blue Cave 2024 - Movies (Oct 17th)
Nos Amours The Saga of the Expos of Montreal 2024 - Movies (Oct 17th)
Untapped Closing America’s Opportunity Gap 2024 - Movies (Oct 17th)
Borderlands 2024 - Movies (Oct 17th)
Watchmen Chapter I 2024 - Movies (Oct 17th)
Fisk - (Oct 19th)
The Beat with Ari Melber - (Oct 19th)
Michael McIntyres The Wheel - (Oct 19th)
Later... with Jools Holland - (Oct 19th)
The Voice UK - (Oct 19th)
Strictly Come Dancing- It Takes Two - (Oct 19th)
Great British Home Restoration - (Oct 19th)
Alex Witt Reports - (Oct 19th)
So Long, Marianne - (Oct 19th)
The SmackDown LowDown - (Oct 19th)
Football Focus - (Oct 19th)
Alan Carrs Picture Slam - (Oct 19th)
John and Lisas Weekend Kitchen - (Oct 19th)
Crime Beat - (Oct 19th)
The Great Indian Kapil Show - (Oct 19th)
A Virtuous Business - (Oct 19th)
The Kitchen - (Oct 19th)
The UnXplained - (Oct 19th)
All Elite Wrestling- Rampage - (Oct 19th)
James Martins Saturday Morning - (Oct 19th)
Three people become connected through mysterious circumstances involving electronic devices which spontaneously appeared in their world.
Avant garde/experimental film. A mesmerizing trip through the psychedelic vastness of space.
Seele orders an all-out attack on NERV, aiming to destroy the Evas before Gendo can trigger Third Impact and Instrumentality under his control.
Homage to the cult classic “Mondo Hollywood”, a groovy mushrooms dealer and a man from the 5th dimension journey through Hollywood to find the meaning of “Mondo.”
The film is about the deceleration of motion in linear form and speed, establishing a connection between space and love. It ends with high-contrast photos with increasingly drastic color changes. This short film, inspired by Brakhage's Stellar film, was created by manipulating 1750 space photos in Photoshop along with grotesque paintings. Some frames contain black paintings by Francisco Goya, grotesque drawings by Leonardo da Vinci, grotesque engravings by William Blake. In order to refer to Brakhage's poetic style and understanding of storytelling in experimental cinema, two poems by Frank O'Hara and Kenneth Koch are placed in the beginning and end of the film.
After a catastrophic global war, a young filmmaker awakens in the carnage and seeks refuge in the only other survivor: an eccentric, ideologically opposed figure of the United States military. Together, they brave the toxic landscape in search of safety... and answers.
In this story set in near future, a group of young rebels, hippies and 1968 protesters want to cede and make an independent Island from the Mainland. A journalist who came to the Island to make a report about political summit that takes place there gets involved in the clash between young rebels and establishment.
Two young men and two girls on a moonlit night confess to each other in their strange fantasies and loves that go beyond the usual standards.. The impetus to making the film was the book of the same name by the Russian religious philosopher Vasily Rozanov, who died 100 years ago. His treatise was devoted to the study of sexuality and its denial in Christianity. The film was made in the style of experimental films of the 1920s with a non-linear narration full of strange surrealistic images. He is black and white and devoid of dialogue. Filmed on film 16 mm of firm "Svema", released in the USSR. This added to his exoticism. The image was put to the music of Alexander Scriabin “The Poem of Ecstasy” (1907).
A documentary like no other. Starting with the bizarre practices and fantasies of a group of filmmakers working under the label Experimental Film Society, it spins off into a manifesto of light and sound. This dazzling journey through a view of cinema as cosmic ritual and erotic delirium is also an idiosyncratic celebration of the medium itself. Rouzbeh Rashidi’s ornate visual style unleashes a parade of visionary scenes that redefine movie magic as a fevered hallucination.
Munich by night. A lonely robot makes its way into the big city. Dance, dance, dance!
As a major storm strikes Texas in 1900, a mysterious televisual device is built and tested. Blake Williams’ experimental 3D sci-fi film immerses us in the aftermath of the Galveston disaster to fashion a haunting treatise on technology, cinema, and the medium’s future.