Joan Crawford is a Hollywood legend. She star of bright and somber melodramas. She reigned on the screens for several decades, but every kingdom has her sunset. At that twilight moment, and as if trying to escape that crossroads, Joan decides to call the notable American artist, the greatest exponent of Pop Art: Andy Warhol. Her intention is to replace her muse, Elizabeth Taylor, in the serigraphs that the artist will present at the Ferus Gallery in Los Angeles. This intrusion will give rise to a telephone conversation where the queen of melodrama will confirm that the world has changed and that her cinematographic life in black and white is already part of an implacable past.

Based on the true story of Valerie Solanas who was a 1960s radical preaching hatred toward men in he...

Alastair Sooke champions pop art as one of the most important art forms of the twentieth century, pe...
A Pop Art extravaganza by Fred Mogubgub from the late-1960s, innovative in the use of the quick cut,...

A documentary about an Iowa artist who made his career from two antique photo albums that he found i...
Henry Geldazhler was the first curator of 20th-century art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and du...

Lifting the lid on the fascinating last decade of Andy Warhol's life and the legacy he left for futu...

Following fateful scientific reports, protestors pose the argument for a better future against the v...

Set in the American Midwest, Perfect Lives is “about” bank robbery, cocktail lounges, geriatric love...

An actress loses her identity in a character, what then turns her life into tragedy.
Egotistical faded star Hedy Lamarr visits a plastic surgeon to be transformed into the "14-year-old ...

Two high school girls, Ruri and Yumi, go to Kyoto on a school trip, here they get acquainted with Hi...

Glamorous and hugely popular Joan Crawford raised herself from brutal poverty to Academy Award-winni...

A look into the unique and rich friendship between pop art legend Andy Warhol and neo-expressionist ...

In 1969, Taylor Mead complained to his friend artist Wynn Chamberlain that Andy Warhol had never pai...

Peter Hutton's New York trilogy. An act of urban archaeology, a chronicle of indelible impressions o...

In Madonna, Tanaami employs his signature collage-style animation, combining pop art influences, ret...

Songs for Drella is a concept album by Lou Reed and John Cale, both formerly of The Velvet Undergrou...

Correlated with Susan Sontag's theorization of kitsch as well as employing the queer lingo of "camp,...

Animation by japanese artist Keiichi Tanaami for John Lennon's song "Oh Yoko!" -- the song was relea...