Are eligible Indigenous bachelors an endangered demographic in the 21st century? That’s the question cheekily posed by Tracey Rigney’s debut documentary short, which invites First Nations individuals to confide what they desire, what holds them back, and their hopes and worries about whether they’ll ever find The One. Endangered first screened at the Melbourne International Film Festival in 2005.
Society has created a stereotype of the LGTBQ collective in which its members are young people who a...
Canadian author, humorist and storyteller W.O. Mitchell talks about his career as a writer and perfo...
When asked a question on politics, late Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish once answered: “I write abo...
In a 2014 artist statement, Kevin Jerome Everson wrote, "The main thing I like doing is filming peop...
A cinematic devotional book. Based on interviews with an unemployable sufferer (and his fellows), li...
Based on an unrealized film script written in 1964 for The Homosexual Law Reform Society, a British ...
A student's increasingly intimate line of questioning causes his interview with a local horror host ...
Filmmaker Alain Resnais documents the atrocities behind the walls of Hitler's concentration camps.
Actor/cult icon Bruce Campbell examines the world of fan conventions and what makes a fan into a fan...
A portrait of Robert, a troubled but poetic soul struggling with his purgatorial existence in a hack...
Like a Spiral is a dialogue between Beirut and five women, migrant domestic workers, under the Kafal...
Elem Klimov's documentary ode to his wife, director Larisa Shepitko, who was killed in an auto wreck...
Filmmaker Jonathan Caouette's documentary on growing up with his schizophrenic mother -- a mixture o...
On October 21, 1967, over 100,000 protestors gathered in Washington, D.C., for the Mobilization to E...
A day and night in the life of three alcoholic derelicts: "and the meek shall inherit the earth - si...
A look at the ruins of the ancient city of Angkor. The largest collection of sculptures the world ha...