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
1-50 of 7,229
- A look at the blend of practical and digital effects in the film, including digital landscapes and computerized arrows.
- Wan's work on the production, stunts, action and vehicles.
- Official page for the music video "Nothing is Lost (You Give Me Strength)" by The Weeknd.
- Despite the territorial defeat of ISIS in Syria, the jihadi group remains a significant threat. Rojava in Northeastern Syria faces the challenge of dealing with 12,000 detained ISIS fighters and some 56,000 ISIS family members.
- Salesman travels through countryside selling aerial photographs. In one house he hears strange noise form a closet.
- Saving the world cat by cat
- A discussion of creating one of the film's signature action scenes
- A quick exploration of the character's design for the film, grounded in the comics, which have altered his appearance over the years.
- A look inside the Fast and Furious-themed amusement park ride. We learn about the new Fast and the Furious attraction at Universal Studios
- A closer look at Ruben Fleischer's work as director.
- Klaus Grahn is a young law student in his early twenties. He has a loyal and nice blonde girlfriend Anita, but is drawn towards a new love interest, the dark haired and more exciting Eija. Frustrated by his small earnings writing bits and pieces for a newspaper he gets the idea for a perfect crime. He forges a check and cashes it in a bank, but the money runs out and now the police are after him. Desperate he boards a train to Tampere and robs a taxi there and shoots the driver with his sawn-off rifle. Getting back to Helsinki he succeeds in avoiding the police who have come to meet him at the train station. He contacts both his girlfriends, who still do not know of the killing. Anita tries to talk some sense to him but fails. Eija tries to comfort him with he loving feelings. After drinking in a bar, Klaus runs amok through the city. He thinks he has been turned in to the police by the girls. He confronts them for the last time - with the gun in his hands.
- When your home turns to hell.
- Paris, July 14, 1789. The kingdom has been in crisis for several months, and the city is buzzing with unrest. Citizens are angry and have had enough of inequality, unemployment and hunger. Armed with axes, hay thieves, knives and rifles, they storm the Bastille fortress. Join us for the crazy day in the streets of Paris, which has become a symbol of the French Republic.
- Glimpses into the making of four of the film's hand-to-hand fight scenes: "Hobbs Vs. Shaw" (3:15), "Girl Fight" (3:20), "Dom Vs. Shaw" (2:52) and "Tej Takes Action" (1:36). In these clips, we find notes from Neal H. Moritz, James Wan, Dwayne Johnson, Jason Statham, Michelle Rodriguez, Bridges, stunt fight coordinator Jeff Imada, supervising stunt coordinator Joel Kramer, and actor Ronda Rousey. As implied by the title, these clips examine physical fight sequences.
- Based on veritable emergency calls and radio traffic.
- A story of two friends, Rafa and Pena, who try to succeed in the Finnish music business during the 1960s.
- Shooting some of the climactic scenes in Los Angeles, Zachary Quinto's physical preparations for his role, and stunt double work.
- Six brief pieces: Director-Sam Mendes, Supercars, Introducing Léa Seydoux and Monica Belucci, Action, Music and Guinness World Record.
- Teenage girls live in a small patriarchal seaside town where they try to figure out a place for themselves amongst sexist rich men and peculiar artistic types. Has been compared to Twin Peaks for similarities in themes and setting.
- A quick exploration of a few of the easter eggs hidden in the film.
- Priest Petrelius refuses to accept the marriage proposals of his daughter Karoliina and Paavo Paulinpoika. Paavo enlists in the King's forces and is wounded. On his return, he finds his village and his beloved at the mercy of the Russians.
- The cry of gulls. The ticking of a clock. The clatter of a shower curtain, torn from its rod. In this workshop-like documentary, Academy Award-winning sound designers invite you to join them at their mix boards to investigate how Alfred Hitchcock employed sound design to tell his cinematic stories, whether making audience members leap from their seats in fright or crawl under them from excruciating suspense.
- Gives us detailed look at filming the Day of the Dead sequence in Mexico City and provides a good sense of the challenging logistics involved. It concludes with the film's Mexican premiere.
- Young Anja accompanies the dead of her hometown to the afterlife comforting the panic stricken newly-deceased with a sweet smile and some of her favorite music. When she joins her brother on the couch moments before his heart attack, things are different.
- Sometimes the only way to safety lies on dark paths....
- A young bank clerk tries to pursue her dreams of a better future, but by doing so her life starts to crumble.
- The film's all-star ensemble cast joins director Bryan Singer and screenwriter Simon Kinberg to share their favorite stories from the set.