Hold Your Breath 2024 - Movies (Oct 3rd)
Love on the Danube Kissing Stars 2024 - Movies (Oct 3rd)
Joker Folie à Deux 2024 - Movies (Oct 3rd)
G.O.A.T ~Greatest Of All Time~ 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
White Bird 2023 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
MaXXXine 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
A Quiet Place Day One 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Speak No Evil 2024 - Movies (Oct 1st)
My Penguin Friend 2024 - Movies (Oct 1st)
Strange Darling 2023 - Movies (Oct 1st)
Heightened 2023 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
¡Casa Bonita Mi Amor 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Megalopolis 2024 - Movies (Oct 1st)
ClearMind 2024 - Movies (Oct 1st)
Knox Goes Away 2023 - Movies (Oct 1st)
Hounds of War 2024 - Movies (Oct 1st)
Saturday Night 2024 - Movies (Oct 1st)
Lazareth 2024 - Movies (Oct 1st)
Sebastian 2024 - Movies (Oct 1st)
Deadpool and Wolverine 2024 - Movies (Oct 1st)
Tim Dillon This Is Your Country 2024 - Movies (Oct 1st)
NOVA - (Oct 3rd)
Secrets of the Dead - (Oct 3rd)
The Rebuild- Inside the Montreal Canadiens - (Oct 3rd)
Great Australian Walks With Julia Zemiro - (Oct 3rd)
All Elite Wrestling- Dynamite - (Oct 3rd)
Reasonable Doubt - (Oct 3rd)
Frasier - (Oct 3rd)
Survivor - (Oct 3rd)
No Gamble No Future - (Oct 3rd)
All In with Chris Hayes - (Oct 3rd)
Alex Wagner Tonight - (Oct 3rd)
The Last Word with Lawrence ODonnell - (Oct 3rd)
The Ark - (Oct 3rd)
Chicago P.D. - (Oct 3rd)
How (Not) To Get Rid of a Body - (Oct 3rd)
Chicago Med - (Oct 3rd)
Chicago Fire - (Oct 3rd)
Bargain Block - (Oct 3rd)
Agatha All Along - (Oct 3rd)
See No Evil - (Oct 3rd)
"This film is one of the first French Unit productions of the “Société Nouvelle/Challenge for Change” program. When an old area of Montréal is to be demolished to make way for a new low-income housing development, is there anything the residents can do to protect their own interests? The film documents such a situation in the Little Burgundy district of Montréal and shows how the residents organized themselves into a committee that successfully influenced the city’s housing policy." - Anthology Film Archives
Diller Scofidio + Renfro has long been at the forefront of design with provocative exhibitions that blurred the boundaries between art and architecture. This film captures their extraordinary evolution and unique process in reimagining the public identities of Lincoln Center and the once derelict High Line railroad tracks.
The unveiled treasures in the year of the Extraordinary Jubilee. The Papal Basilicas of Rome seen as never before: St. Peter's, St. John in the Lateran, St Mary Major, St Paul Outside the Walls and the works of art enshrined within them. A film tour shot from previously unseen points of view with the latest-generation 3D and 4K technology.
Just a stone’s throw from downtown Montreal is the largest social housing complex in Quebec. Built in 1959 where the red-light district used to be, Les Habitations Jeanne-Mance have retained something of the area’s seedy reputation for poverty, prostitution, drugs and violence. But who really knows the projects and the people who live there? Delving beneath the prejudices and stereotypes, director Isabelle Longtin ventured inside the buildings and met the residents.
A short documentary that takes a look at Pratt Institute's Architecture program and how the first years handle the rigorous workload.
Having previously investigated the architecture of Hitler and Stalin's regimes, Jonathan Meades turns his attention to another notorious 20th-century European dictator, Mussolini. His travels take him to Rome, Milan, Genoa, the new town of Sabaudia and the vast military memorials of Redipuglia and Monte Grappa. When it comes to the buildings of the fascist era, Meades discovers a dictator who couldn't dictate, with Mussolini caught between the contending forces of modernism and a revivalism that harked back to ancient Rome. The result was a variety of styles that still influence architecture today. Along the way, Meades ponders on the nature of fascism, the influence of the Futurists, and Mussolini's love of a fancy uniform.
“A Short History of the Highrise” is an interactive documentary that explores the 2,500-year global history of vertical living and issues of social equality in an increasingly urbanized world. The centerpiece of the project is four short films. The first three (“Mud,” “Concrete” and “Glass”) draw on The New York Times's extraordinary visual archives, a repository of millions of photographs that have largely been unseen in decades. Each film is intended to evoke a chapter in a storybook, with rhyming narration and photographs brought to life with intricate animation. The fourth chapter (“Home”) comprises images submitted by the public. The interactive experience incorporates the films and, like a visual accordion, allows viewers to dig deeper into the project’s themes with additional archival materials, text and microgames.
For centuries, archaeologists have been trying to understand the Aztec empire and reveal the truth about their origins. Now, new excavations could reveal astonishing secrets about how they lived and what life was like inside one of the greatest empires in history. Where did this group of nomadic people originate from? How did they undertake building their towering pyramids and other ambitious engineering feats using manpower alone? And how was such a powerful empire wiped out after just 200 years of power?
The war zone of a dystopian multiplayer shooting game is used to embark some urban explorers on a winter walk, avoiding the combats whenever possible, as peaceful observers, inhabitants of a digital world, which is a detailed replica of Midtown Manhattan.