Scott Nixon, a traveling salesman based in Augusta, Ga., was an avid member of the Amateur Cinema League who enjoyed recording his travels on film. In this 16-minute silent film, Nixon documents some 38 streets, storefronts and cities named Augusta in such far-flung locales as Montana and Maine.
Working men and women leave through the main gate of the Lumière factory in Lyon, France. Filmed on ...
This is not a film about gun control. It is a film about the fearful heart and soul of the United St...
Filmmaker Jonathan Caouette's documentary on growing up with his schizophrenic mother -- a mixture o...
A documentary about the corrupt health care system in The United States who's main goal is to make p...
With a movie camera mounted in the passenger seat of his car, Andy Anderson drove around filming his...
Covering over 100 years of cinema, this is a journey of discovering and exploring the magic of cinem...
A tribute to the late, great French director Francois Truffaut, this documentary was undoubtedly nam...
Two surfers go on a road trip through New Zealand.
A BFI collection of 7 short films from the USA, England and Italy scored for Piano, Guitar and Strin...
A Dream Trip Across India Some kilometers from Bombay, the Indian megalopolis, lost on a hill of Bo...
Released two years after James Dean's death, this documentary chronicles his short life and career v...
Germany's first Open Source movie. A gonzo style documentary.
When Francois Truffaut approached Alfred Hitchcock in 1962 with the idea of having a long conversati...
He was an anarchist and provocateur. Underground filmmaker and a cheeky fuck. Several of today's vet...
About a journalist and his cameraman visiting East Germany, former GDR, 25 years later again after t...
As children, British actor Paul Blackthorne and Australian photographer Mister Basquali both fell in...
The program on this DVD is basically a retrospective produced in the early 1990s for public televisi...
Data—arguably the world’s most valuable asset—is being weaponized to wage cultural and political war...