Attempts to showcase how the creation of art directly correlates to the perception we have of ourselves and the life around us as shown through the eyes of a struggling family.
Russian emigré Dimitri Kirsanoff’s film, alternatively titled Death of A Stag and Une chasse à courr...
Inside the claustrophobic scenery of a fancy apartment in the city of Frankfurt three men and a woma...
Two women – one passive and resigned, the other aggressive and domineering – interact in various loc...
The final 17 years of American singer and musician Karen Carpenter, performed almost entirely by mod...
Originally edited in two versions. Version I, 70 minutes; version II, 90 minutes. (The only known ex...
In Razor Blades, Paul SHARITS consciously challenges our eyes, ears and minds to withstand a barrage...
Lois Patiño dissects the movement of a fire, analyses its fleeting ephemeral forms, and transforms t...
Agustín, a 70-year-old retired baseball player with a serious heart problem, faces a strong dilemma:...
For a young boy, ordinary facts and things of daily life seem to have great importance.
A meditation on freedom and technological approaches to manifest destiny.
As a family struggles to survive in rural isolation during the Great Depression, their daughter's se...
Lacking a formal narrative, Warhol's mammoth film follows various residents of the Chelsea Hotel in ...
Diwan, a lyric anthology, an outdoor movie with people. With people living in the surrounding precio...
First film by Julio Bressane shot in exile, "Memoirs" is a film about a man who repeatedly kills the...
Bressane's second London film, shot in six days in his apartment. "I had seen the French avant-garde...
An experimental movie based on a poem of the French writer and director Jean Cocteau about a servant...
Two young men and two girls on a moonlit night confess to each other in their strange fantasies and ...
Levin lives in his memories and can't shake his first love. Caught in a spiral of constant changing ...
Born in Los Angeles but a New Yorker by choice, Barbara Hammer is a whole genre unto herself. Her pi...