The Windigo 2024 - Movies (Mar 12th)
American Scream 2025 - Movies (Mar 11th)
Wolf Man 2025 - Movies (Mar 11th)
Suky 2025 - Movies (Mar 11th)
Heartbreakers Beach Party 2024 - Movies (Mar 11th)
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Iliza Shlesinger A Different Animal 2025 - Movies (Mar 11th)
Anora 2024 - Movies (Mar 10th)
Moana 2 2024 - Movies (Mar 10th)
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My Husband the Cyborg 2025 - Movies (Mar 9th)
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Piers Morgan Uncensored - (Mar 12th)
Beyond the Gates - (Mar 12th)
Come Dine With Me- South Africa - (Mar 12th)
Endangered Species Aotearoa with WWF - (Mar 12th)
Tyler Perrys The Oval - (Mar 12th)
Someday at a Place in the Sun - (Mar 12th)
Crimewatch Live - (Mar 12th)
Selling Houses Australia - (Mar 12th)
Family Feud Canada - (Mar 12th)
Home of the Year - (Mar 12th)
Ishura - (Mar 12th)
Wild Cards - (Mar 12th)
Allegiance - (Mar 12th)
A Killers Mistake - (Mar 12th)
Body Bizarre - (Mar 12th)
The Weekly with Charlie Pickering - (Mar 12th)
The Dog House Australia - (Mar 12th)
The Chase Australia - (Mar 12th)
Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen - (Mar 12th)
Deal or No Deal Island - (Mar 12th)
A coast guard captain on a small Greek island is suddenly charged with saving thousands of refugees from drowning at sea.
A contemplative, seemingly timeless record of the years Hutton spent in Southeast Asia while working as a merchant seaman. Jon Jost writes, "The film is rich with truly wonderful visions: a thick, white porcelain cup perched on a ship's rail, the tea within swaying gently in sync with the ship while the sea rushes by beyond the faces of crewmen posing awkwardly but also movingly for the camera; a cockfight on ship; scenes from a bucolic pre–Pol Pot Phnom Penh. Images has the haunting elegiac resonance of Eugène Atget's Paris, the echo of a time and place that was." - MoMA
"…elegant yet rustic in its simplicity of execution; tugged gently toward different sides of the set by hints of color and motion interactions, positive and negative spaces, etc., and the unyielding delivery on one of the great apotheoses of poetic cinema at fade-out time." – Tony Conrad
An exploration —manipulated and staged— of life in Las Hurdes, in the province of Cáceres, in Extremadura, Spain, as it was in 1932. Insalubrity, misery and lack of opportunities provoke the emigration of young people and the solitude of those who remain in the desolation of one of the poorest and least developed Spanish regions at that time. (Silent short, voiced in 1937 and 1996.)
A celebration of the universe, displaying the whole of time, from its start to its final collapse. This film examines all that occurred to prepare the world that stands before us now: science and spirit, birth and death, the grand cosmos and the minute life systems of our planet.
Women of mature years talk about their marriage, their first time, their intimate relationship with sexuality. In the repetition of these ancestral rituals, the director questions her own lack of marriage, of children, and with it, a chain of mother-daughter relationships that is dying out.
A group of people are standing along the platform of a railway station in La Ciotat, waiting for a train. One is seen coming, at some distance, and eventually stops at the platform. Doors of the railway-cars open and attendants help passengers off and on. Popular legend has it that, when this film was shown, the first-night audience fled the café in terror, fearing being run over by the "approaching" train. This legend has since been identified as promotional embellishment, though there is evidence to suggest that people were astounded at the capabilities of the Lumières' cinématographe.
Fascinating - and unintentionally funny - experiments at Austria's famed Institute for Experimental Psychology involve a subject who for several weeks wears special glasses that reverse right and left and up and down. Unexpectedly, these macabre and somehow surrealist experiments reveal that our perception of these aspects of vision is not of an optical nature and cannot be relied on, while the unfortunate, Kafkaesque subject stubbornly struggles through a morass of continuous failures.
This film illustrates the life of the film director, Shui-Bo Wang in The People's Republic of China. We learn of the life of the director in his own words and images from a child steeped in the values of Chinese communism exemplified by Chairman Mao, to a young man striving to live up to those ideals both as an artist and a soldier.
The Colours of My Father: A Portrait of Sam Borenstein is a 1992 short animated documentary directed by Joyce Borenstein about her father, the Canadian painter Sam Borenstein. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. In Canada, it was named best short documentary at the 12th Genie Awards.
In January, 1997, a team of five nurses, four anesthesiologists, and three plastic surgeons arrive in Vietnam from the United States for two weeks' of volunteer work. They operate on 110 children who have various birth defects and injuries. They also talk to the film crew about why they've made this trip and what it means to them. We watch them work, and we see the children, their families, and their surroundings in the Mekong Delta. Over the closing credits, Dionne Warwick sings Bacharach and David's "What the World Needs Now Is Love".