“There’s a bus stop I want to photograph.” This may sound like a parody of an esoteric festival film, but Canadian Christopher Herwig’s photography project is entirely in earnest, and likely you will be won over by his passion for this unusual subject within the first five minutes. Soviet architecture of the 1960s and 70s was by and large utilitarian, regimented, and mass-produced. Yet the bus stops Herwig discovers on his journeys criss-crossing the vast former Soviet Bloc are something else entirely: whimsical, eccentric, flamboyantly artistic, audacious, colourful. They speak of individualism and locality, concepts anathema to the Communist doctrine. Herwig wants to know how this came to pass and tracks down some of the original unsung designers, but above all he wants to capture these exceptional roadside way stations on film before they disappear.
An account of the life and work of Russian filmmaker Andrey Tarkovsky (1932-86) in his own words: hi...
Gerald S. Doyle was one of the first collectors of Newfoundland folk songs. He was also an avid cine...
Charlie Marx and the Chocolate Factory started as an investigation of the link between politics and ...
James Andersen: Over 50 Years of Taking Pictures is a culmination of photos, films that are brought ...
The childhood home of Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, and playground for her daughter Elizabeth, ...
A group of young architects, confined to a forest in Barcelona during the COVID crisis, explore the ...
Paco and Manolo are two Catalan photographers from the outskirts of Barcelona who have been working ...
A glimpse of the pre-history of cinema starting with the projections of Etienne Gaspard Robert (also...
A docu-art film about Kyiv and the contemporary problems of the capital. The film raises the issue o...
In 1944 Crimean Tatars has suffered a long road in exile. It was accompanied by famine, illness and ...
Documentary film about the first St. Petersburg music club TaMtAm. It existed since 1991 upon 1996 ...
Disrupt, reject, destroy, avoid: At the interrupted rhythm of the broken photographs that a granddau...
In 1919 an art school opened in Germany that would change the world forever. It was called the Bauha...
A documentary that follows the life of photographer Daido Moriyama in the present, which has never b...
Poème Électronique is an 8-minute piece of electronic music by composer Edgard Varèse, written for t...
A biography documentary of the Argentine modernist architect Amancio Williams.
Errol Morris examines the incidents of abuse and torture of suspected terrorists at the hands of U.S...
Tells the story of the tragic events in Ukraine in 1932-33, the genocidal Great Famine or the Holodo...