CRASHLAND is a docufiction. A blend of documentary and narrative vignettes that tell the story of a crash test dummy as it attempts to find purpose in a small, college town, in the summer of 2016.

“Unhappy with the limited structure of league newsreels, Nykino, a splinter filmmaking collective, p...

In 1899, Lord Kang must decide which of his three sons will take over his family's Chinese banking e...

A black and a white woman meets in Dar es Salam because of their men, and starts a friendship, despi...

Amanda is a divorced woman who makes a living as a photographer. During the Fall of the year Amanda ...

Califia, the Queen and spirit of California, gives the audience a quick and somewhat romanticized lo...

Director Michael Apted revisits the same group of British-born adults after a 7 year wait. The subje...

The story, told by the survivors, of a group of young men, members of a Uruguayan rugby team, who ma...

A psychiatrist encourages his female patients to tell him their sexual problems, each as each relate...

The Heart of Man is a timeless tale of a father's relentless pursuit of his son -- interwoven with i...

The protagonists of this docudrama are old farmers who migrated to Banat after the First World War, ...

Three Days is a feature film exploring the on-and-off-tour lives of Jane's Addiction. Set predominat...

Chronicles of a male homosexual drug addict in 1980's in voice-over with long take scenes from Rome,...

Conversations with four people — an artist, a woman struggling with her identity as a high achiever,...

A view of the religious tensions between Muslims and Buddhist through the portrait of the Buddhist m...

Caroline Darian, Gisèle Pelicot's daughter, looks back on the tragedy that shook her family: for ten...

Tucumán, Argentina, 1965. Three years before George A. Romero's Night of the Living Dead was release...

A narrative by Puneeth Rajkumar aka Appu which explores state of Karnataka - the land, its culture a...

According to the official history of Afghanistan, ruthless destruction has always prevailed over art...