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).

Robert Estragon has worked his way to the top of the food chain as a doctor in the city, but it has ...

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

2 flatmates unfold the layers of their relationship on a random Sunday afternoon after they encounte...

Four young office workers have a bet going to see who can last the longest without going outside. In...

A young man pretends to sleep while he watches his lover go through her morning routine.

As the day ends for a worn-out office worker, he encounters the mysterious gaze of a chimpanzee, spa...

The story of two teenage extraterrestrial refugees from the planet Pluto, who escape to Earth after ...

Servais Mont, a freelance photographer who works taking compromising photos, gets fascinated by Nadi...

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

The wind carries an aspiring healer into a chaotic, virulent parallel world. Paralyzed by a familiar...

A young couple with conflicting desires for intimacy attempt to navigate the emotional complexities ...

A bored insurance salesman quits his job to go into politics. He first starts preaching about how ma...

An experimental film revolving around how an artist perceives a man and a woman.

Grappling with the complexities of mental health and trauma in a digital age that feels isolating an...

This short film, built around a randomly chosen name and composed of scenes shot within a single roo...

As she keeps watching old home movies isolated in her hotel room, the screen becomes a mirror from w...

A 16mm experimental film that analogizes the discourse of racialized criminality and the carceral ap...

X-ray images were invented in 1895, the same year in which the Lumière brothers presented their resp...