Naomi Kawase observes people in the city of Shibuya with curiosity and openness, drawing parallels between life and filmmaking and discovering her abilities as a filmmaker.
Six adult siblings and the vicissitudes of fertility, infertility, and the desire - met and unmet - ...
A documentary of insect life in meadows and ponds, using incredible close-ups, slow motion, and time...
Cuba, 1961: 250,000 volunteers taught 700,000 people to read and write in one year. 100,000 of the t...
We Came Home is the story of Afghanistan through Afghan American musician, Ariana Delawari. Born in ...
With an off beat sense of humour, the film looks at the politics and glamour of lipstick and the dil...
Through one woman's experience as an adopted person and also as a mother who relinquished her child ...
The unknown story behind the Native Hawaiian singer whose cover medley "Somewhere Over the Rainbow/W...
A look at the aftermath of the Sandy Hook massacre where 20 children were murdered at school by a cr...
Strasbourg was home to one of three Reich Universities founded by the Nazis, known as a project clos...
For years, filmmaker Sacha Polak has known that she carries the BRCA1 hereditary cancer gene, respon...
Childhood stories of the artist as a young lesbian and intimate tales of the lesbian as a young arti...
Darwin meets Hitchcock in this documentary. Directors Dan Geller and Dayna Goldfine have created a p...
In the history of aviation, there have been only 14 of them: sole survivors of a commercial aviation...
Pack your bags for a trip to a Catskills summer camp where the stars of tomorrow go to prepare for t...
The fourth film in Alanis Obomsawin's landmark series on the Oka crisis uses a single, shameful inci...
This John Nesbitt's Passing Parade short tells the story of Alfred Nobel, who invented dynamite, and...
Part two of Leni Riefenstahl's monumental examination of the 1938 Olympic Games, the cameras leave t...
Working men and women leave through the main gate of the Lumière factory in Lyon, France. Filmed on ...
Through a powerful visual metaphor, Camille Vigny gives a first-person account of the domestic viole...