“Tramp, Tramp, Tramp the Boys Are Marching” features a song that dates back to the Civil War, one which was still familiar to audiences of the 1920s. The cartoon begins as Koko the Clown emerges from an inkwell-- an iconic image for animation buffs --and then steps over to a chalkboard to draw an orchestra. The band, “Koko's Glee Club,” marches to a nearby cinema (accompanied by a dog who beats cymbals with his tail) where they lead the audience in the title song.
When Andra, a diagnosed psychopath, receives a love letter from Sadie, an undiagnosed love addict, h...
A Canadian mother travels to Florida with her 4 year-old daughter to take part in a mini-miss contes...
The cosmic journey of sacred youth, during which pain, pleasure, and sublimation are nonnegotiable.
About the 1914 soccer game when the English played the Germans in No Mans Land on Christmas Day. Onl...
A stop-motion documentary that describes the artificial mummification (black and red mummies) of the...
Imagine Switzerland's national soccer team playing the finals of the EURO 2008 and the TV channel tu...
The Male Gaze is a new series of releases from New Queer Visions that showcases short LGBTQ films fr...
When every global citizen is mandated to participate in a program that tracks their CO2 emissions, i...
On a planet trapped in black and white, a strange comet crashes—transforming young intern Vector int...
An animated adaptation of Nikolai Gogol's classic short story about an office worker who saves all h...
Mothers And Daughters is a short film depicting the tensions between a mother, her unresponsive teen...
An older professor longing for motherhood must recalibrate her path to pregnancy when she realizes o...
After a heartbreaking loss, a grandfather struggling to reclaim his passion for painting finds the i...
On the eve of his 30th birthday, a gay slacker must overcome his crippling insecurities in order to ...
The Seven Lucky Gods (or kami, meaning both "hair" and "gods") live in the Takada’s barber shop in T...