Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-26 of 26
- Live versions of the songs, filmed in an old Pompeii amphitheater. Songs included are Echoes (split into 2 parts), Careful with that axe, Eugene, A saucerful of secrets, One of those days, Set the controls for the heart of the sun, Mademoiselle nobbs (Seamus, but with Rick's dog on vocals). "Careful" and "Set the controls" are shot at night with minimal lighting, setting a beautiful mood. And the live Saucerful just has to be seen, with Waters jumping around in the sunlight banging the huge gong. The 80-minute version features studio footage from the recordings of Dark side of the Moon, with alternate versions of Us and them, On the run and Brain Damage, as well as interviews with the band.
- A documentary series on several of the key albums in music history.
- Riviera was a s Tory of two warring business families. Old money & new American money. Story revolves around Villa Olympia on coast of Riveria, owned by a old money lady owning it, want to help her son start a casino with an American billionaire. Really great tv show broadcasted on Star network then owned by a Hing kong billionaire.
- A camera crew follows Helmut Newton, the fashion and ad photographer whose images of tall, blond, big-breasted women are part of the iconography of twentieth-century erotic fantasy. He's on the go from L.A., to Paris, to Monte-Carlo, to Berlin, where he was a youth until he escaped from the Nazis in 1936. We see him on shoots, interviewing models, and discussing his work. It's not art and it's not good taste, he tells students. We meet June, his Australian-born wife, whom he married in 1948. Three actresses talk about working with Newton and how posing is different from acting. A heart attack in 1973 helps Newton re-focus, resulting in more personal photographic projects.
- Who was Pol Pot, the criminal leader of the Red Khmer Rouge? This portrait draws on archival footage and rare eyewitness accounts, including the only interview with Pol Pot made before his death by American journalist Nate Thayer. Pol Pot, whose real name was Saloth Sar, remains an enigma. No other revolutionary leader has left so few traces. Pol Pot almost always refused to give interview, not only when he was in power but even later on, when he took refuge with his troops in the Cambodian forests. But in 1997, the Khmer Rouge movement imploded.
- Documentary about the Belgian surrealist artist who died in 1967.
- The Ça Ira opera album includes a bonus DVD which features a behind-the-scenes look at the opera, from concept to completion, together with exclusive interview footage of Roger Waters, the soloists, the musicians and the cast of Ça Ira.
- Comrade Duch murdered 14,000 people on behalf of the Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia's Tuol Sleng prison in the 1970 and 1980s. Today, the repentant killer has been confronted by evidence of his horrendous crimes against humanity in a court, and by the people of Cambodia who suffered at his hands. In the Extraordinary Chambers of the Courts of Cambodia, Duch (born Kaing Guek Eav) and onlookers watch wrenching tribunal footage, and face the anguish and anger of relatives of Tuol Sleng victims. Comrade Duch might never have been captured and brought to trial if not for Irish photojournalist Nic Dunlop, who searched tirelessly for Duch until finding him in a remote area near the Thai border, 20 years after his escape from Tuol Sleng and subsequent conversion to evangelical Christianity. Because of the intervening years and the radical change Duch underwent while in hiding, it is not a simple matter to condemn the man. And yet it is especially terrifying to realize this mild-mannered math teacher could have turned turned into such a vicious sadist for years, and then suddenly converted to a peaceful and devout Christian. Perhaps it is simply too much to believe. It is up to the court to decide what justice awaits the born-again executioner.
- The Program for Art on Film was a joint venture of The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the J. Paul Getty Trust. It was established in 1984 to foster new ways of thinking about the relationship between art and moving-image media. Between 1987 and 1990, the Program for Art on Film commissioned fifteen short films and videos through its Production Laboratory. The Lab was conceived as an arena for inquiry and experimentation - a means of exploring and expanding the cinematic vocabulary of films on art. Each production was designed as an extended collaboration between a filmmaker and an art expert and was intended to explore the issues of collaboration in content-driven filmmaking, seeking new approaches that might influence future films on art. The ART ON FILM series of DVDs presents the results of the Production Laboratory in their original context: as experiments. The broad range of film subjects illustrate a variety of approaches and interpretations. And, while these films ask to be judged as works of art in their own right, they also should be understood as parts of an ongoing dialogue about the cinema's role in communicating art history.
- Le Centre National d'Art et de Culture Georges Pompidou , better known as 'Centre Pompidou' or 'Beaubourg' celebrates its tenth birthday. Thirteen personalities are interviewed about this first decade (1977-1987) and their words are illustrated by archive images, a complete visit of the centre and an overview of the most important exhibitions that took place there.
- Until his death in 1994, the twentieth century master Paul Delvaux was the last surviving member of the first generation of surrealist painters. In this portrait, he reminisces about his family, himself, his art and the various phases of his career. He explains that all his visual ideas are derived from childhood memories and the film shows the way in which these scenes have been incorporated into his work. The painter is seen as a young man (the earliest footage dates from 1945) and the film includes some unique shots of the extraordinary Musée Spitzner.
- Featuring archival footage from legendary fashion photographer Helmut Newton, French pop band Phoenix captures the timeless magic of the 80's in their latest music video, Role Model.
- A detailed look at the production of the biggest album in the history of progressive rock and one of the best-selling albums of all time.
- 2006–TV Episode
- 1997–20171hTV Episode