Valiant One 2025 - Movies (Feb 2nd)
Mafia Wars 2024 - Movies (Feb 2nd)
Mister Sleep 2024 - Movies (Feb 2nd)
From Embers 2024 - Movies (Feb 2nd)
An Unexpected Valentine 2025 - Movies (Feb 2nd)
Matt and Mara 2024 - Movies (Feb 2nd)
Alpacalypse 2024 - Movies (Feb 1st)
The Ultimate Stack A Poker Documentary 2024 - Movies (Feb 1st)
Baul Soul of Bengal 2024 - Movies (Feb 1st)
Blondie Glass Heart 2024 - Movies (Feb 1st)
The Paranormal UFO Connection 2024 - Movies (Feb 1st)
Kid Snow 2024 - Movies (Feb 1st)
Sebastian 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Hounds of War 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
A Quiet Place Day One 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Cabrini 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Eternal Theater 2024 - Movies (Feb 1st)
Companion 2025 - Movies (Jan 31st)
The Fabulous Four 2024 - Movies (Jan 31st)
Homestead 2024 - Movies (Jan 31st)
Piglet 2025 - Movies (Jan 31st)
Alex Witt Reports - (Feb 2nd)
Rich House, Poor House - (Feb 2nd)
Call the Midwife - (Feb 2nd)
The Great Pottery Throw Down - (Feb 2nd)
Dancing on Ice - (Feb 2nd)
Mystery Music Show- King of Mask Singer - (Feb 2nd)
Inside with Jen Psaki - (Feb 2nd)
Harlem Globetrotters- Play It Forward - (Feb 2nd)
Earth Odyssey with Dylan Dreyer - (Feb 2nd)
Love Your Weekend with Alan Titchmarsh - (Feb 2nd)
Lidias Kitchen - (Feb 2nd)
Australian Idol - (Feb 2nd)
Scars of Beauty - (Feb 2nd)
Oceanfront Property Hunt - (Feb 2nd)
All Elite Wrestling- Collision - (Feb 2nd)
Lakefront Luxury - (Feb 2nd)
Jesse Watters Primetime - (Feb 2nd)
Hannity - (Feb 2nd)
Special Report with Bret Baier - (Feb 2nd)
The Ingraham Angle - (Feb 2nd)
The celebrities who visited Luisita Escarria's photo studio in Buenos Aires for decades are countless. Sol, a young photographer, discovers there more than 25,000 unpublished negatives, an archive of incalculable value that opens a window through which to look at the true artistic epicenter of Argentinean popular culture…
A reckless joyride into the darkest corners of popular music that delves deep into the mind of Mick Rock, the genius photographer who immortalized the seventies and the rise to rock stardom of many legendary musicians.
What we know today about many famous musicians, politicians, and actresses is due to the famous work of photographer Harry Benson. He captured vibrant and intimate photos of the most famous band in history;The Beatles. His extensive portfolio grew to include iconic photos of Muhammad Ali, Michael Jackson, and Dr. Martin Luther King. His wide-ranging work has appeared in publications including Life, Vanity Fair and The New Yorker. Benson, now 86, is still taking photos and has no intentions of stopping.
From Vogue magazine fashion photographer to filmmaker, painter and sculptor, Bailey is the working-class Londoner who befriended the stars, married his muses (Jean Shrimpton, Catherine Deneuve, Marie Helvin) and captures the spirit and elegance of his times with his refreshingly simple approach and razor-sharp eye. He is also the man whose life and work inspired one of the cult movies of the sixties, Michelangelo Antonioni's Blow-Up, and who has constantly travelled the globe either with the most beautiful models or chronicling the contemporary reality of Papua New Guinea, Brazil, Vietnam, Afghanistan and other countries with ground-breaking reportages. Above all, Bailey is a romantic with a delightful sense of humour approaching his 73rd year and showing no sign of slowing up. Director Jérôme de Missolz has created an engaging portrait of this very private man who bared the soul of the swinging sixties and seventies with his photographs and films.
Described in Art Review as the world’s most influential and expensive living artist, the German painter Gerhard Richter was enjoying enormous success in London with his retrospective show at Tate Modern entitled Panorama in 2011. This particular film was made some years ago at the time of his equally successful American retrospective at MOMA entitled “40 Years of Painting” and charts his entire artistic career. Born in Dresden in 1932, the year before Hitler came to power, Richter later grew up in communist East Germany, before escaping to the West just before the Wall went up in Berlin. Since then he has produced a large diverse body of work from his blurred photobased paintings to his gigantic abstractions, from his Baader Meinhof pictures to his perceptual installations using sheets of glass. Gerald Fox’s film caught up with the artist at his home in Cologne where he was undergoing a period of quiet reflection and preparation before beginning a new series of paintings.
Friends and athletes Artem Vladimirov and Sergey Bastrykin went on an unprecedented expedition to the Krasnoyarsk Territory, Khakassia and Tuva. This segment of the route runs along the R-257 Yenisei highway, which is why friends called it the Yenisei Marathon. In a month, they traveled more than 1,100 kilometers, spent the night in tents and risked their lives more than once. Why and at what cost did they get this extraordinary journey?
Third film in the documentary series that looks at low-budget filmmaking.
The egocentric documentary-maker Chris Waitt traces his romantic ineptitude and sexual impotence through awkward interviews with irate ex-girlfriends and stunts involving S&M parlours, Harley Street doctors and Viagra overdoses. The results are often hilarious, sometimes moving and speak directly to the hapless paramour in all of us.
This 2005 documentary film chronicles the life of Daniel Johnston, a manic-depressive genius singer/songwriter/artist, from childhood up to the present, with an emphasis on his mental illness and how it manifested itself in demonic self-obsession.