How Do You See Me? is a Brazilian documentary feature that entwines both experienced actors and beginners to explore the hardships and the happiness that are inherent to the job when detached from the glam and glitz of the gossip industry, creating a diverse and comprehensive mosaic of what it means to be an actor in Brazil, a country so full of contradictions. The film brings forward a reality that the masses usually don't get to know: the men and women moved by a deep passion for acting and touching people. With Julio Adrião, Matheus Nachtergaele, José Celso Martinez, Cássia Kis, Nanda Costa, Babu Santana, Luciano Vidigal and Letícia Sabatella, among others.

Martin Blaszko is considered one of the most important artists of geometric abstraction in Latin Ame...

In Pablo Picasso's career, a blue and pink period gets the attention they deserve. It is between 19...

An installation film that consists of a six-hour-long monologue performed by Edith Clever, who reads...

Fernando Lemos, a Portuguese surrealist artist, fled from dictatorship to Brazil in 1952 searching f...

Hours and historical meetings, Pierre Assouline has composed an anthology of the best extracts prese...

Five female artisans from the Innu, Franco-Quebecois, and Zapotec peoples discuss their work. Their ...

Tells the history of skateboard art and its evolution through the decades, as iconic and rebellious ...

African Underground: Democracy in Dakar is a groundbreaking documentary film about hip-hop youth and...

Amid the civil-military dictatorship implanted with the 1964 coup, Sergio Muniz had the idea of maki...

The documentary is titled after Arkadaş Z. Özger’s poem “Hello My Dear” which had caused much contro...
Germán Cipriano Gómez Valdés Castillo, a young radio announcer from Cuidad Juárez, succeeds in drawi...
The ultimate guide to the players on the road to Rio. Ahead of the world football tournament in June...

An incredible historic document showcasing the roots of Old School Hip Hop movement with all its dis...
Mickey Rooney is interviewed by Robert Osborne.

M.C. Escher is among the most intriguing of artists. In 1956 he challenged the laws of perspective w...

Plastic artist Aparicio Arthola talks with his student about the catarsis in his creative process, t...

How do artists view their own work? How does actor Esko Salminen immerse himself in his roles, how d...