Fly Me to the Moon 2024 - Movies (Jul 8th)
Liam Brady The Irishman Abroad 2023 - Movies (Jul 7th)
Back to Black 2024 - Movies (Jul 7th)
Andromeda 2 2024 - Movies (Jul 7th)
Andromeda 3 2024 - Movies (Jul 7th)
Longing 2024 - Movies (Jul 7th)
Rendel 2 Cycle of Revenge 2024 - Movies (Jul 7th)
The Seeds 2024 - Movies (Jul 7th)
Civil War 2024 - Movies (Jul 6th)
Fortunes of War 2024 - Movies (Jul 6th)
Goyo 2024 - Movies (Jul 5th)
The Imaginary 2023 - Movies (Jul 5th)
Boy Kills World 2023 - Movies (Jul 6th)
Hard Miles 2023 - Movies (Jul 6th)
Autumn and the Black Jaguar 2024 - Movies (Jul 6th)
Challengers 2024 - Movies (Jul 6th)
Despicable Me 4 2024 - Movies (Jul 6th)
Operation Nutcracker 2024 - Movies (Jul 5th)
My Two Husbands 2024 - Movies (Jul 5th)
Ruby Gillman Teenage Kraken 2023 - Movies (Jul 5th)
Firebrand 2023 - Movies (Jul 5th)
The Chase Australia - (Jul 8th)
Spent - (Jul 8th)
The Cook Up with Adam Liaw - (Jul 8th)
Snapped - (Jul 8th)
Sins of the South - (Jul 8th)
Tipping Point Australia - (Jul 8th)
The Traitors NZ - (Jul 8th)
Highway Cops - (Jul 8th)
Shark Week - (Jul 8th)
Magnolia Table with Joanna Gaines - (Jul 8th)
New Zealand’s Best Homes with Phil Spencer - (Jul 8th)
Countryfile - (Jul 8th)
Mayor of Kingstown - (Jul 7th)
House of the Dragon - (Jul 8th)
60 Minutes - (Jul 8th)
90 Day Fiance- Pillow Talk - (Jul 8th)
Down the Hill- The Delphi Murders - (Jul 8th)
Deadly Waters with Captain Lee - (Jul 8th)
MILF Manor - (Jul 8th)
Signs of a Psychopath - (Jul 8th)
"Rosa", with a libretto by Peter Greenaway and score by Louis Andriessen, is the first in a projected series of 10 operas, each dealing with the death of a famous composer - some real, others fictional. "Rosa" falls into the latter category; it tells the story of Juan Manuel de Rosa, a Brazilian who went to study music in America but spent most of his time in the cinema instead, becoming particularly entranced by Westerns. Now 32 years old and residing in an abandoned Uruguayan slaughterhouse, Rosa has become one of Hollywood's foremost composers, specialising in Westerns. He also has a beautiful 19-year-old fiancee, Esmeralda, but he pays her little heed, instead lavishing his attentions on a black mare named Bola. One day, a group of men attired as cowboys arrive at the abattoir and kill both Rosa and Bola; an investigation is conducted, with particular suspicion!
L’Étoile did much to establish Chabrier as a major force on the Parisian stage and his contemporary Henri Duparc praised him specifically for creating a French comic genre, both funny and musical – described as something of a French Die Meistersinger. The fanciful story is set in an imaginary kingdom and all, naturally, ends well. However, despite the slight plot line L’Étoile is something of a pivotal work, a unique example of French 19th-century light opera, orchestrated with great sophistication and flooded with gossamer wit.
Benjamin Britten’s opera Gloriana was written in 1953 for celebrations around the Coronation of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, to whom the opera is dedicated. It had its first performance at the Royal Opera House on 8 June 1953, in the presence of The Queen then just 6 days into her reign. The centenary in 2013 of Britten’s birth prompted this new Royal Opera production, in which director Richard Jones uses the setting of a celebratory pageant in 1953 to explore the work’s alternating splendour and intimacy. This theatrical, inventive and colourful staging has at its core the symbolic reflections between the Tudor Elizabethan and the New Elizabethan ages that characterize the opera. The juxtaposition of the modern and the archaic in William Plomer’s libretto is wonderfully amplified in music that artfully fuses the sounds and manners of Tudor England – from lute songs to courtly dances – with Britten’s own distinctive style.
It is to composer and librettist Arrigo Boito and his constant pestering of the octogenarian Verdi that there remained within him one last great comedy fighting to get out that we owe this absolute miracle of an opera. Produced in 1893 as Verdi turned 80 there is much in this masterpiece that can be identified as a modernist neoclassical work. The use of short motifs instead of long arioso melodic lines, the spry and reduced orchestral textures and the lack of a single 'stand and deliver' dramatic declamatory aria all serve to make this more of a 20th century work than an example of 19th century late-Romanticism.
Is this a film about Scrooge? About a composer’s life? An opera within an opera? The Passion of Scrooge blurs these lines between performance, documentary, and fiction, into a cinematic concert experience that’s seasoned with magical reality. Composer Jon Deak has adapted Charles Dickens’ timeless tale into a contemporary opera that melts the heart, but doesn’t avoid the darkness in Scrooge that’s still resonant with the material concerns of our time. Using neither period costumes, nor set pieces to reconstruct old England, the film invites you to experience A Christmas Carol with the imaginative possibilities of a radio play. And then, to meet those visions in your head, filmmaker H. Paul Moon‘s floating camera intimately captures musicians performing the score as characters themselves, in this ageless haunted redemption story about “us, every one.”
Part folklore, part opera-ballet, this féerie presents local pagan traditions on the day of the summer solstice and historical events from Cossack times to the more recent 2014 Ukrainian Revolution of Dignity.
The sequel to the 2013 short, August sings Carmen 'Habanera'. After Elfie and her nerdy son August successfully proved themselves on their home webcam in MeTube 1, the odd pair venture onto the street to present the biggest, boldest, and sexiest operatic flash mob the internet has ever witnessed!
Nikolaus Harnoncourt conducts the Wiener Philharmoniker in this filmed studio performance of Mozart's opera recorded in 1988.
Director Rolf Liebermann’s 1968 filmed-for-TV production of Carl Maria von Weber’s opera, with the Hamburg State Opera performing an adapted stage version. Soloists include Bernhard Minetti, Toni Blankenheim and Arlene Saunders. The conductor is Leopold Ludwig.
Imbuing the familiar Don Juan myth with a captivating combination of comedy, seductiveness, danger, and damnation, Mozart created an enduring masterpiece that has been a cornerstone of the repertory since its 1787 premiere. An early entry in the Met’s series of PBS telecasts, this 1978 performance captures a young James Morris in a smooth portrayal of the title role, with the legendary Joan Sutherland showing off her unsurpassed technique as Donna Anna and Gabriel Bacquier as a masterful Leporello.
The setting of the opera is the enchantress Alcina's island: here by her magic powers she has created a magnificent palace in a beautiful landscape, to lure her many lovers into her power. One of these is Ruggiero, a warrior, who under Alcina's spell has forsaken his duty and his betrothed, Bradamante.