Lydia Lunch and Richard Kern's first collaborative effort, The Right Side of My Brain, is a glimpse into the world of unsatiable female lust, narrated by Lydia Lunch. The film was initially dismissed and dismayed by critics such as J. Hoberman, but the criticism of The Right Side of My Brain received only pushed the two to go one step further with Fingered (1986).

A documentary about the sea and memory. Its movement is its form. Its strength.

First film by Julio Bressane shot in exile, "Memoirs" is a film about a man who repeatedly kills the...

A reframing of the classic tale of Narcissus, the director draws on snippets of conversation with a ...

In the aftermath of an emotional shock, a ruthless high-class manager faces her own abyss, becomes p...

A queer poet navigates heartbreak through writing, techno, and self-destruction.

A journey to an unknown star, a children's theatre play, an untalented writer and the fear of becomi...

Joey works as a waiter for a hedonistic community of summer holiday makers in a small Mediterranean ...

A student moves into their accomodation, only to find their room already decorated, a strange, inhum...

Returning to his hometown one last time, a wayward love rat reignites friendships and reopens old wo...

Oriana Mejer's niche poem-film style has created "NOISE!". The film dissects late stage capitalism a...

A loop of a guy in Maine hanging out in his room.

A theater group begins their rehearsal on a play about a witness' account of a massacre eventually l...

History as immersion and dispersion in the fragments of the past, a visionary journey accompanied by...

In his Miami studio, built as a solar observatory, a famous painter lives alone, without a wife or c...

In the land of the slides, three handicapped plot against people with two legs.

Created by Antonio Rezza using an auto-timer and edited in the video camera, it describes selfishnes...

A cinematic impression of Vietnam, told through the eyes of Vietnamese immigrants.