Paul and Trisha The Art of Fluidity 2024 - Movies (Dec 13th)
All I Need for Christmas 2024 - Movies (Dec 13th)
Heightened 2023 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Sebastian 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Hounds of War 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Knox Goes Away 2023 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
A Quiet Place Day One 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Cabrini 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Elton John Never Too Late 2024 - Movies (Dec 13th)
Canadian Sniper 2024 - Movies (Dec 13th)
Disaster Holiday 2024 - Movies (Dec 13th)
Carry-On 2024 - Movies (Dec 13th)
Mudbrick 2023 - Movies (Dec 13th)
From Embers 2024 - Movies (Dec 13th)
The Area 51 Incident 2024 - Movies (Dec 13th)
Utopia 2024 - Movies (Dec 13th)
Deaner 89 2024 - Movies (Dec 13th)
The Christmas Letter 2024 - Movies (Dec 13th)
Dirty Angels 2024 - Movies (Dec 12th)
Quadrant 2024 - Movies (Dec 13th)
Driven The Tony Pearson Story 2023 - Movies (Dec 13th)
After Midnight - (Dec 13th)
The 11th Hour with Stephanie Ruhle - (Dec 13th)
Bring Back My Girls - (Dec 13th)
Trivial Pursuit - (Dec 13th)
Scrabble - (Dec 13th)
Gutfeld - (Dec 13th)
Hannity - (Dec 13th)
Jesse Watters Primetime - (Dec 13th)
Outnumbered - (Dec 13th)
Special Report with Bret Baier - (Dec 13th)
The Five - (Dec 13th)
The Ingraham Angle - (Dec 13th)
Alaska PD - (Dec 13th)
The First 48 Presents Critical Minutes - (Dec 13th)
Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen - (Dec 13th)
The Great Christmas Light Fight - (Dec 13th)
Batwheels - (Dec 13th)
Letters and Numbers - (Dec 13th)
The Chase Australia - (Dec 13th)
Return to Las Sabinas - (Dec 13th)
In this feature length season premiere of Mighty Car Mods, Marty and Moog are back doing what they do best - modifying a car on a budget in preparation for a special event.
The boys from Mighty Car Mods take a road trip around Hokkaido in Japan in a 660cc Kei Car for their first feature length film.
Southern California’s Coachella Valley, including the communities of Palm Springs, Palm Desert, Desert Hot Springs, boasts hundreds of extraordinary midcentury modern homes, public buildings and commercial structures. Modern designers such as William F. Cody, Albert Frey, William Krisel, John Lautner, Richard Neutra, R.M. Schindler, Donald Wexler, E. Stewart Williams left their collective mark on this desert paradise. Desert Utopia: Mid-Century Architecture in Palm Springs traces the history of modern architecture in Palm Springs from the first bold forays into modernist design to the preservation challenges facing the region today. Director Jake Gorst’s film features rare archival images and footage as well as interviews with historians, homeowners and the architects who helped create this mecca of modernism.
“This film was a gift to me. I make no claims for it, nor do I offer any apologies. It comes from work on The Thoughts That Once We Had. There was one shot we had to cut whose loss I particularly regretted. It was a shot of a train pulling into Tokyo Station from Ozu’s The Only Son (1936). So I decided to make a film around this shot, an anthology of train arrivals. It comprises 26 scenes or shots from movies, 1904-2015. It has a simple serial structure: each black & white sequence in the first half rhymes with a color sequence in the second half. Thus the first shot and the final shot show trains arriving at stations in Japan from a low camera height. In the first shot (The Only Son), the train moves toward the right; in the last shot, it moves toward the left. A bullet train has replaced a steam locomotive. So after all these years, I’ve made another structural film, although that was not my original intention.”
In this charming documentary, director Gillian Leahy combines her two great passions: dogs and film. She openly reveals her life story through a canine prism – lovers may come and go, but there are always the dogs. Leahy also weaves in her filmmaking career, starting out at the Women's Film Workshop in 1970s Sydney and the newly formed AFTRS. Dogs have carried her through childhood illness and heartbreak; in return she lavishes care, and frets over their waywardness. Today, she shares her life with a big brown Labrador called Baxter. There are echoes of Leahy's award-winning My Life Without Steve, a study in love and loss, in this meditative and romantic film.
A mockumentary about Doctor Kurz, the inventor of the BioK-2: a rejuvenating drug extracted from ñandús (rheas).
The picture is about the anti-Hitler coalition of the USSR, England and America, which developed as a counterweight to the aggressive policy of Nazi Germany during the Second World War. The unique newsreel footage of these years, shot by operators of different warring countries, is connected with today's thoughts of the author about the fate of the post-war world, about the humanitarian losses of both sides and about gaining unstable hopes for the unity of the world in countering evil.
The Robert Mapplethorpe documentary, from 1988-one year before he died-is an excellent examination of one of the most controversial of American photographers. British documentarian Nigel Finch does an outstanding job fusing interviews with Mr. Mapplethorpe himself, with critic and author Edmund White, and with several of Mapplethorpe's subjects as well, with numerous shots of the man's work. Mapplethorpe, gay, did not hesitate to photograph what he wanted to without fear of reprisal or censorship. Indeed, a good number of his pieces were not shown in the documentary at its original airing on PBS with the comment, "Considered Unsuitable for Viewing On This Transmission." His openly sexual work can at times be more than shocking, but it is always powerful and direct; as critic Lynn Davies says in the documentary, he did not pose people but photographed them doing what they would normally do in the course of their lives.
This controversial documentary created a storm in Russia by taking the cloak off a violent, repressive period of Soviet history. Filmmaker Semyon Aranovich found the last surviving personal bodyguard of Joseph Stalin, Alexey Robin, who began working for the dictator in the 1930s.