The Little Mermaid 2024 - Movies (Mar 7th)
Bloat 2025 - Movies (Mar 7th)
Captain America Brave New World 2025 - Movies (Mar 7th)
Confessions of a Romance Narrator 2025 - Movies (Mar 6th)
Woods of Ash 2025 - Movies (Mar 6th)
Agents 2024 - Movies (Mar 6th)
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Mozarts Sister 2024 - Movies (Mar 5th)
The Road to Patagonia 2024 - Movies (Mar 5th)
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The Unbreakable Boy 2025 - Movies (Mar 4th)
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Smile for the Dead An Examination of Spirit Photography 2025 - Movies (Mar 4th)
The Haunted the Possessed and the Damned 2024 - Movies (Mar 4th)
The Tale of Texas Pool 2024 - Movies (Mar 4th)
Below the Rim 2024 - Movies (Mar 4th)
Aquarius 2024 - Movies (Mar 4th)
Echo 8 2024 - Movies (Mar 4th)
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Andrew Schulz LIFE 2025 - Movies (Mar 4th)
Impractical Jokers - (Mar 7th)
Dateline- Secrets Uncovered - (Mar 7th)
Highway Thru Hell - (Mar 7th)
Canadas Ultimate Challenge - (Mar 7th)
The Rachel Maddow Show - (Mar 7th)
Southern Charm - (Mar 7th)
The Last Word with Lawrence ODonnell - (Mar 7th)
Geordie Shore - (Mar 7th)
Yellowjackets - (Mar 7th)
Power Book III- Raising Kanan - (Mar 7th)
Christina on the Coast - (Mar 7th)
Lets Make a Deal - (Mar 7th)
The Price Is Right - (Mar 7th)
The Traitors - (Mar 7th)
Budding Prospects - (Mar 7th)
Building Outside the Lines - (Mar 7th)
All In with Chris Hayes - (Mar 7th)
Georgie and Mandys First Marriage - (Mar 7th)
Severance - (Mar 7th)
Surface - (Mar 7th)
In Thorold, Ontario in the summer of 1996, a movie legend was made when a real-life tornado hit a drive-in theatre during a screening of Twister. But how much truth really lies inside this tale of life (or weather) imitating art?
A video documentary/road trip that celebrates the drive-in movie theater's impact on the United States, and pays homage to the people who keep the few remaining ones fully operational. Features interviews with horror movie maker John Carpenter, movie critic John I. Bloom (aka "Joe Bob Briggs"), Michael Wallis, author of "Route 66: The Mother Road," and others.
Downtown Recife’s classic movie palaces from the 20th century are mostly gone. That city area is now an archaeological site of sorts that reveals aspects of life in society which have been lost. And that’s just part of the story.
ONLY IN THEATERS, a film by actor/director Raphael Sbarge, is an intimate and moving journey taken with the Laemmle family, spanning nearly three years of challenges, losses, and personal triumphs. Laemmle Theatres, the beloved 84-year-old arthouse cinema chain 3rd generation family business in Los Angeles, is facing seismic change and financial pressure. Yet the family behind this multigenerational business – whose sole mission has been to support the art of film – is determined to survive.
In the heart of the Finnish forest, the long-closed foundry of the little town of Karkkila has come back to life thanks to director Aki Kaurismäki and his creation of the town's first cinema. The peace and calm of the little town of Karkkila, nestled deep in the Finnish forest, is interrupted by unexpected sounds. In the abandoned foundry, noisy building work is taking place. Inside the building, Aki Kaurismäki is both builder and site manager of what is soon to become the Kino Laika cinema. The creation of the cinema is the talk of the town. In the factory still in activity, in a 1960s Cadillac, in a bikers' club, in the local pub, in the woods or in Aki Kaurismäki's former editing room, people start talking about cinema again.
For two decades, Cine Marrocos, a movie theatre in the heart of São Paulo, was one of the most popular and opulent of the city. After it was closed, in 1972, it was occupied by a homeless workers' movement. The documentary tells the story of the people who lived there, alternating scenes from an acting class with those of the movies exhibited there in the past.
[19:30 | 35mm (1.85) | Stereo Sound | 2013] The Broken Altar is a portrait of open-air theaters documented under the strange light of day, emptied of the once present hum of human voices, radioed-in soundtracks and tires on gravel. Scripting the landscape and exploring the residue of a cinematic history, The Broken Altar forms a sculptural treatment of the architectural artifacts of these abandoned and barren spaces: speaker boxes rise from tall grass like grave markers and the screens themselves are monumental, sepulchral in their peeling whiteness.
In the silent film era, movies were never really silent. In the background of films that made figures like Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton into cultural icons, were the musical giants whose compositions defined the very films that captivated a generation of movie-goers. Arthur Kleiner converses with the still-living legends from that bygone golden age of cinema.
A filmmaker celebrates his inspiration for movies by recreating what it was like for his 9-year old self in 1972 when he journeyed downtown to spend a magical Saturday afternoon at the movies.
At struggling independent movie theatres across Alberta, passionate business owners are reviving, re-inventing and sometimes letting go of these once-vital community spaces.