“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.

Big Time gets up close with Danish architectural prodigy Bjarke Ingels over a period of six years wh...

A documentary about surrealist artist Salvador Dali, narrated by Orson Welles.

Documentary devoted to the architectural and urban planning designs of Le Corbusier. The architect s...
Showing Sergei Parajanov at the end of his life, the film depicts the suffering of a genius against ...

Wes Hurley's autobiographical tale of growing up gay in Soviet Union Russia, only to escape with his...

Russia is grappling with a critical issue: they have become the country with the most at large seria...

A core group of architects embraced the West Coast from Vancouver to LA with its particular geograph...

Filmmaker Steve York explores the controversial 2004 Ukrainian presidential election, during which c...
Documentary film about the development of underdeveloped regions of the Czechoslovak Republic thanks...

The British architect based in Stockholm looks back on major projects of a long career inspired by E...

The hippie movement that captivated hundreds of thousands of young people in the West had a profound...

How in 1959, during the heat of the Cold War, the government of the United States decided to create ...

Lithuania, 1941, during World War II. Hundreds of thousands of texts on Jewish culture, stolen by th...

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

The Alps are covered by a nearly invisible security system that’s supposed to protect humans from na...

People looking at the Mona Lisa in the Louvre – or are they just looking at themselves?

The film tells the story of the intimate and unprecedented encounter between the photojournalists of...