Small Things Like These 2024 - Movies (Dec 15th)
Kraven the Hunter 2024 - Movies (Dec 16th)
Terrifier 3 2024 - Movies (Dec 15th)
Joker Folie à Deux 2024 - Movies (Dec 15th)
Sinister Surgeon 2024 - Movies (Dec 15th)
Clickbait Unfollowed 2024 - Movies (Dec 15th)
The Santa Class 2024 - Movies (Dec 15th)
Ape X Mecha Ape New World Order 2024 - Movies (Dec 15th)
Two Lives in Pittsburgh 2024 - Movies (Dec 15th)
The Trust Fall Julian Assange 2023 - Movies (Dec 15th)
The Highest Brasil 2023 - Movies (Dec 14th)
The Secret Kingdom 2023 - Movies (Dec 14th)
Chicken Coop 2024 - Movies (Dec 14th)
Bring Him to Me 2023 - Movies (Dec 14th)
Emilia Pérez 2024 - Movies (Dec 14th)
My Private Line to God 2024 - Movies (Dec 14th)
Joe Mande Chill 2024 - Movies (Dec 14th)
Ford v Holden 2023 - Movies (Dec 14th)
King Charles III The New Monarchy 2023 - Movies (Dec 14th)
Harry Styles Are You Curious 2023 - Movies (Dec 14th)
Sharks vs. Dolphins Bahamas Battleground 2023 - Movies (Dec 14th)
Dune- Prophecy - (Dec 16th)
Vinnie Jones In The Country - (Dec 16th)
Yellowstone - (Dec 16th)
The Good Stuff with Mary Berg - (Dec 15th)
LIVE with Kelly and Mark - (Dec 15th)
The Last Socialist Artefact - (Dec 15th)
Jamie Cooks... Christmas - (Dec 15th)
Body Cam- On the Scene - (Dec 15th)
Fletchers Family Farm - (Dec 15th)
Alex Witt Reports - (Dec 15th)
The Chocolate Queen - (Dec 15th)
Love Your Weekend with Alan Titchmarsh - (Dec 15th)
Inside with Jen Psaki - (Dec 15th)
Face Jams Truckd Up - (Dec 15th)
Girl Meets Farm - (Dec 15th)
Finding Mr. Christmas - (Dec 15th)
Krempoli - A Place For Wild Children - (Dec 15th)
The Kelly Clarkson Show - (Dec 15th)
Invincible Fight Girl - (Dec 15th)
Wolf Hall - (Dec 15th)
Drawing together footage, photographs and texts from archival sources as well as the artist’s personal collection of materials, Yto Barrada’s new film is as much a poetic enigma as it is a portrait of identity. Ether Reveries (Suite for Thérèse Rivière no.2) takes as its starting point the work and life of Thérèse Rivière (1901–1970), a French anthropologist whose remarkable working life was cut short following her confinement in psychiatric institutions.
A day in the city of Berlin, which experienced an industrial boom in the 1920s, and still provides an insight into the living and working conditions at that time. Germany had just recovered a little from the worst consequences of the First World War, the great economic crisis was still a few years away and Hitler was not yet an issue at the time.
A young man recalls different moments of his life, reflecting the preservation of memory, the enigma of time and the inevitability of death
As if directing a science-fiction film, Johana Ožvold dissects the story of electronic music. From the pioneer sound engineers working behind the Iron Curtain, through the French avant-garde composers, up to the post-modern creators of digital sonic artefacts, the first-time filmmaker summons an abstract landscape that is haunting and yet achingly beautiful. A voice appears from old television screens forgotten in the maze of some futuristic archive where past and future seem to coexist in a complex and multi-layered way.
Stylish film of the British progressive rock band Pink Floyd in 1971 performing a concert with no audience, in the ancient Roman Amphitheater in the ruins of Pompeii, Italy. There are four editions of the film: the original 1972 version with the concert only (60 min.), a longer 1974 theatrical version (85 min.) featuring the concert interspersed with interviews and footage of Pink Floyd in the studio working on their next album, Dark Side of the Moon, the 2003 Director's Cut which added CGI effects to the 1974 version, then finally the 2016 Blu-ray version which re-arranged the song order of the 2003 version.
Casa Loma was the unfinished dream mansion of Canadian industrial magnate Henry Pellatt. A self-made millionaire, Pellatt was derided by fellow aristocrats for nouveau-riche pretentions: the house and its décor considered by many an ornate fake. Its original contents were sold at Pellatt’s bankruptcy auction in 1924. Today the building is a museum. The movie has three sections—the first in a cellar tunnel, the next in a first-story workroom near the stables, the third in the tower’s summit.
The Mutability of All Things and the Possibility of Changing Some explores our human adaptability in light of catastrophe by way of seminal literature passages implying a transitory social body.