Jean-Luc Godard is synonymous with cinema. With the release of Breathless in 1960, he established himself overnight as a cinematic rebel and symbol for the era's progressive and anti-war youth. Sixty-two years and 140 films later, Godard is among the most renowned artists of all time, taught in every film school yet still shrouded in mystery. One of the founders of the French New Wave, political agitator, revolutionary misanthrope, film theorist and critic, the list of his descriptors goes on and on. Godard Cinema offers an opportunity for film lovers to look back at his career and the subjects and themes that obsessed him, while paying tribute to the ineffable essence of the most revered French director of all time.

Klaus Kinski has perhaps the most ferocious reputation of all screen actors: his volatility was docu...

Using archival footage, cabinet conversation recordings, and an interview of the 85-year-old Robert ...

Documentary about war photographer James Nachtwey, considered by many the greatest war photographer ...

When looking at Pedro Almodóvar’s filmography, it becomes evident that women are everywhere; in fact...

A documentary about an Iowa artist who made his career from two antique photo albums that he found i...

The film traces the career of some of the winners of this new generation nicknamed the "K-Classics G...

Martin Blaszko is considered one of the most important artists of geometric abstraction in Latin Ame...

Fernando Lemos, a Portuguese surrealist artist, fled from dictatorship to Brazil in 1952 searching f...

One of the 20th century Belgian artists who was the most idolized, exhibited, published, sold... Yet...

It’s the hit musical that changed Broadway forever and brought the genius of Lin Manuel Miranda to t...

The story of the documentary The Sorrow and the Pity (1971), directed by Marcel Ophüls, which caused...

A portrait of a man of rare elegance and enigmatic charm, versatile and successful: Jean-Louis Trint...

In just ten films, Maurice Pialat painfully rose to the top of the cinema, draining into his legend ...

New York, June 3, 1968. Valerie Solanas enters the Factory, Andy Warhol's studio, and fires three sh...

Fulton and Pepe's 2000 documentary captures Terry Gilliam's attempt to get The Man Who Killed Don Qu...

A portrait of the inventor of the letterpress, who was a key figure in the history of mankind, but a...

Mary Bauermeister is considered the mother of the Fluxus movement. In an attic on Cologne's Lintgass...