A short film essay on Blue Velvet (1986) and The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976). The fact that Blue Velvet was almost shot in black and white is explored in comparison with the original scenes, as the choices of different directors (within a ten-year interval) when choosing Roy Orbison's music for their films.
Quite a few years have passed since November 1989. Czechoslovakia has been divided up and, in the Cz...
Iggy Pop reads and recites Michel Houellebecq’s manifesto. The documentary features real people from...
This documentary essay introduces a peculiar trio of men united by their passion for hunting. Each o...
A personal essay which analyses and compares images of the political upheavals of the 1960s. From th...
From the behavior, discourse, and appearance of individual actors, Vachek composes, in the form of a...
A look at the Brazilian black movement between 1977 and 1988, going by the relationship between Braz...
Every image in The Fall of Communism as Seen in Gay Pornography comes from gay erotic videos produce...
The cooking show is as old as television itself. But why do we like watching the making of a meal th...
A found-footage essay, Filmfarsi salvages low budget thrillers and melodramas suppressed following t...
The armies of Fascist Italy conquered Addis Ababa, capital of Abyssinia, in May 1936, thus culminati...
The six-hour essay in four parts examines the history of regimes and revolutions, leaders and martyr...
The fascinating story of the rise to power of dictator Benito Mussolini (1883-1945) in Italy in 1922...
A fragmented collection of independent closed cinemas, in London during lockdown, captured on Super ...
A tribute to a fascinating film shot by Alfred Hitchcock in 1958, starring James Stewart and Kim Nov...
A personal meditation on Rumble Fish, the legendary film directed by Francis Ford Coppola in 1983; t...
A labyrinthine portrait of Czech culture on the brink of a new millennium. Egon Bondy prophesies a c...
The Water Map is an essayistic journey through the ethnography and landscapes of the Region of Murci...
Basically an artist is also a terrorist, the protagonist thinks in an unguarded moment. And if he is...
Filmmaker John Torres describes his childhood and discusses his father's infidelities.
Staged as a series of voiceover sessions, written with gloriously off-balanced precision and dipped ...