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Filmed over a ten-month period throughout Australia, this probing documentary examines the political controversy surrounding Native Title and the Australian Federal Governments proposed amendments to the Native Title Act, 1993. It follows the Indigenous representatives in their attempt to fight the amendments in the media, in the bush, and in the halls of Parliament House, Canberra.
8mm short by Yasunori Ikeda.
Mutzenbecher films his immediate surroundings - his daughter in a flower dress, a glass of water, window bars, a plastic horse, and himself repeatedly walking out onto the balcony to smoke and - also sitting on the windowsill, also smoking. Carefully framed double exposures and corrections to the framing are exploratory movements - "Which view?" "Which image?" The repetition of sequences at different speeds broadens the scope of this search into the media: "How to show?"
Yvonne Rainer combines a dance performance she choreographed for Mikhail Barryshnikov’s White Oak Dance Project in 2000 with texts by Oscar Kokoschka, Adolf Loos, Arnold Schoenberg, and Ludwig Wittgenstein—four of the most radical innovators in painting, architecture, music, and philosophy to emerge from fin-de-siècle Vienna.
A documentary feature film about a cinematographer who is caught in a mass arrest. His film crew's videotape of the incident leads to a civil rights lawsuit, uncovers a police spying ring and launches his personal investigation in to the weird world of domestic surveillance. With special appearances by Andre '3000' Benjamin, Barack Obama, The Bush Twins, Cornel West, Al Sharpton and Don King.
A world where everything is created by humans. Deforming their own bodies, they calculate ways to increase the efficiency and convenience of their lives. If there are people who use their deformed bodies as tools for the purpose of labor, there are also those who are transformed into equipment for the purpose of just pleasure. A world entirely controlled by people, where they change form to become the things they want to be.
A young couple from Chengdu, China, struggles to build a perfect home in Singapore. As their dream of becoming Singaporeans seems more and more remote, they decide to go and see the pandas.
A short post-apocalyptic film.
Recorded live at Vega, Copenhagen, November 2nd & 3rd 2004. The intended release-date was 7th June 2005, hence 07.06.05 on the cover, but due to technical problems it was delayed.
About loneliness and feeling isolated.
Two Australian boys have the ability to disappear to their own place in the forest. When they get caught skipping school they are exposed to prejudice and are forced to question what their special place means.
A letter from the British government classifying Paulette Wilson as an illegal immigrant shook her sense of identity and belonging to the core. ‘Hostile environment’ policies years in the making meant that Wilson and other victims of the Windrush scandal had their right to residency in the UK called into question. She had been detained for a week pending imminent deportation though she had done nothing wrong. It was devastating, but luckily she was released before she was deported. Here we follow Wilson as she returns to Jamaica for the first time in 50 years, trying to make sense of her place in the world and rebuild a sense of security and belonging.
It's been a long time coming.
Documentary looking at Britain's drinking culture. On Newcastle's Bigg Market, one can see everything from broken ankles on the dance floor to broken noses on the street. An army of people try to make sure the night goes well.
On June 12, 2016, Pulse nightclub’s weekly “Latin Night” was in full swing on South Orange Avenue. Just over 300 patrons were dancing and laughing as last call rolled around 2AM. Moments later a terrorist attack shattered the seemingly “safe space” of one of Orlando’s beloved gay bars. When the madness subsided, 49 beautiful souls were lost, dozens more injured, and a community of thousands was left broken. But what has happened since that night to the survivors—the ones who lost friends and lovers, who are bonded together by an unthinkable act of violence? This powerful and amazingly hopeful testament gathers together many of the people who hunkered down in bathroom stalls and behind the bar and allows them a space to share the details of that night and the ongoing effects of living through a “national tragedy” from an incredibly intimate perspective.
Daniel Henry follows the Black Lives Matter campaign in the UK, as the country looks at its record on race. Britain presents itself as a tolerant nation but the Windrush scandal, Grenfell and far-right terror plots tell a different story.
In the small New England town of Deep Woods, Margaret Ray is murdered. It is now up to young Detective William Stockwell to find out who killed her and why in this dark comedy murder mystery. There are plenty of suspects who all had a motive to kill her and each one as a weak alibis making it more difficult to figure out who did it.
We return to Deep Woods where more of the truth is exposed and learn that the person who confessed to the murder of Margret Ray may not actually be the killer nor the person they appear to be. In this chilling follow up to "Murder After Dark" things begin to happen which blows a hole into the solved case of the Margaret Ray murder. With the killer behind bars everyone should be safe, right?
Everyone at the retirement village is very excited that the new resident is a well-known detective, because every imaginable crime is committed here: From disappearing jewelry, to sleeping pills mixed into the tea - but what if he suggests it's all happening in their heads?