“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.

In 1959, a government employee named Richard Oyler, living in the tiny desert town of Lone Pine, Cal...

The Gateway Arch: A Reflection of America chronicles for the first time the complete story of this g...

The documentary tells two very different human fates in the 1920s Soviet Union. Nikolai Vavilov was ...

Thirty years after the Chernobyl disaster, which occurred on the night of April 26, 1986, its causes...

In 2015, in Damascus, the Basateen al-Razi district and its orchards were razed to the ground as pun...
Winy Maas, co-founder of MVRDV architects, always has 100 projects going at once. Documentary filmma...

A tribute to the cameramen of the newsreel companies and the service film units, in the form of a co...

Documentary about 4 large architectural landmarks that projected Portugal abroad.

In 2011, photographer Tanja Hollander decided to visit each one of her Facebook "friends" (all 626 o...

At the peak of Perestroika, in 1987, in the village of Gorki, where Lenin spent his last years, afte...

Errol Morris examines the incidents of abuse and torture of suspected terrorists at the hands of U.S...

Portrait of photographer Bengt Åke Kimbré where he narrates his own life story accompanied by his ph...

Filmmaker Steve York explores the controversial 2004 Ukrainian presidential election, during which c...

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

Immigrant workers build a shopping mall for the upcoming 1972 Olympic Games in Munich. In 2016, nine...

The action is placed in a cramped flat in Warsaw’s district of Ochota. A father and a son, both bedr...