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A young guy who is facing problems with his girlfriend seeks the advice of his grandfather in the matters of love and life.
A woman in NYC sells weed to make a little extra cash. She's never been failed by her trusty referral system, until she gets a text one fateful summer afternoon.
A documentary about the intersecting worlds of art, pop-culture, sex, and business in the Middle East after the Egyptian revolution. It follows Dutch-Egyptian conceptual artist Tarik Sadouma and Jordanian pop singer Malak al-Naser as they travel to Cairo, Beirut and Dubai.
A documentary on the vaudevillian art-pop band.
Various eccentric characters pitch movie ideas (including the title plot in which Charles Manson steals a time machine) to a mysterious powerbroker with skeleton hands. Women wrestle in jumpsuits, men swordfight in the river. Filmed at the now-defunct Werepad artspace in San Francisco.
A sleepover turns stressful when one of the girls suffers a miscarriage, and all must work to cover it up before breakfast. PLAYER ONE is a dark comedy about the struggles and idiocies unique to teenage women.
From Antiquity to the year 2000, the epic of hemp, told by itself. Religion, war, rebellion, the life of this plant has been so linked with that of mankind that for once we thought it right to let "Cannabis Sativa" speak for itself. Hemp first appeared in the Far East about 12,000 years before Christ. In daily life "Cannabis Sativa" or hemp was used for making cloth paper and bows. In sacred use it was a medicine and was used in many religious uses in India and with the Scythians. The twentieth century establishes the duality of the plant. In Europe as in China, hemp is used in the textile industry while it is used once more medically in the treatment of numerous disorders. Disadvantaged by the interdictions which it incurs as a psychotropic herb, hemp is a real economic and ecological problem today.
Paging all parents! Need some post-war childrearing advice? Then this is the film for you. It was an instalment in the Your Children series of films produced between 1945 and 1951, dealing with various facets of children's health - in this case, the importance of play to both mental and physical development. The surprise is not that much of it has amusingly dated – of course it has – but how much still feels enlightened and applicable today.
Israeli soldiers describe and reflect on human rights abuses they perpetrated while serving in the Occupied Palestinian Territories
Karnataka’s Hakki Pikki tribe and its oddly named people
Symphony of the Planets is an abstract composition in which planetary shapes revolve in spiralling forms to the music of Tchaikovsky
Concert by the Argentine heavy metal band Logos, filmed at the Obras Sanitarias Stadium (Buenos Aires) on December 15, 2007.
An ironic look at Winnipeg’s Portage Place shopping mall, from its opening day (September 17, 1987), to what may be its final days (Fall of 2019). Created for the 2019 WNDX One Take Super 8 Challenge.
An obsessed loner gets embroiled in a murder scheme after finding the object of his affection dead on her kitchen floor.
A collage of colors and shapes intersect and flow - from Mirai Mizue,
Plain Talk is a complex essay-film, a follow-up a decade and some years later to Speaking Directly, and so another State of the Nation discourse, made for Britain's Channel Four in the year 1986-87. The work involved extensive travel around the United States, and poses an examination of just what America is/was, or what do we mean when we speak of it. Done in a series of radically different sections which collide with each other in a manner intended to provoke thinking, Plain Talk, which was made by an American and intended for American viewers, was indeed broadcast in Britain, but somewhat predictably, not in the USA.
The entire population of the earth could live in a giant city occupying a fraction of the Earth’s surface, freeing the rest of the world for rewilding and return of stolen lands, according to a new movie by architect Liam Young. Young’s fictional Planet City movie proposes a hyper-dense metropolis housing 10-billion people that could be built on 0.02 per cent of the planet.