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 859
- French director Olivier Megaton takes a look back at a Masterclass he gave for the Kinoma Association on the explosive career path that has taken him from solo Street-Art graphics to international co-productions with great success.
- Thursday, October 24 : the Wall Street Stock Exchange crashes, the greatest economic crisis of the 20th century suddenly breaks out. Fuelled by frenetic speculation, and by the idea that everyone can get rich without limits, it puts a final stop to the euphoria of the 1920s.
- This is the story of how the world's leading economy sinks into the Great Depression, with repercussions that allow Hitler to rise to power. Eventually, President Franklin D. Roosevelt brings hope and optimism back into the hearts of the US population.
- Hardwicke revisits this personal project too reluctant to support. She highlights the challenge women have faced as filmmakers in Hollywood and the challenges while outlining what her dream film would have looked like.
- Discreetly zany, Ya Rayah collects heterogeneous objects and images. Throughout this enumeration we find smoking shoes, wandering typography, x-rays of feet... The assembly of these materials creates a playful journey, revealing the movement of writing in the process of being written. Where we find the poetic gesture dear to the imagination of ALIS, whose work is inspired by the methods of Oulipo. The approach of ALIS, a group founded by Dominique Soria and Pierre Fourny, is not standard. She focuses on the search for a new expression using different artistic disciplines. Usually, their compositions are displayed on stage or displayed in art galleries. After The Lament of Progress, this film opens again, with music by Dahmane el Harrachi, a rich field of inquiry into their cheerful and cleverly organized remarks.
- Between a conversation on seduction and moments of her intimate life, Julia's attitude to love and to her own contradictions.
- The faculty of Porto by Alvaro Siza: the program and its spatial transposition, the complexity of the articulations between the buildings, the richness of the interior circulation and the variety of lighting.
- -Alger, 1998, at the end of the terrorist period. Fatima, fifty-five, lives in a neighbourhood torn apart by domestic violence and bloody political settling of scores. She lives isolated and alone. She seems not to want to take any sides. But this apparent indifference hides a secret.
- Without a salary and facing cold and hunger, seven Ukrainian sailors are fighting for their survival in a ship parked for years in the Bay of Naples.
- A shopping center somewhere in suburbia, teeming with people. It's Christmas tomorrow. Time to look back, to take stock. A young woman, a little girl, the star moderator of a talk show and a stray dog on heat will cross paths.
- Using footage of her family she has shot on video for over a decade ,the filmmaker offers a personal vision of the complexities of the war in Lebanon.
- At the dawn of the 21st century group of scientists are conducting genetic experiments on 5 voluntary human subjects. Completely unexpected results occur that might have broader implications on all humanity.
- Watershed is a film about national territory: geography, landscapes in movement, and political boundaries: who decides what? How do citizens act on their own space ? An investigation into the tangle of institutions and the way the territory is being changed by new actors.
- An interview of Violette Verdy and several masterclasses given by the retired prima ballerina, who was once revealed to the world by the great choreographer Roland Petit, she was to become the star dancer of the American City Ballet., under the direction of George Balanchine or Jerome Robbins to whom she inspired major ballets.. In "Violet and Mr. B"., the voluble and ebullient sixty-eight year old dancer is seen (and heard) coaching new stars such as Elisabeth Platel, Isabelle Guérin, Elisabeth Maurin or Lucia Lacarra.
- A woman is waiting for a young man to comeback after years of separation.
- Tarantino Special.
- From its Palme d'Or win to its 4 million Japanese viewers, the triumph of "A Family Affair" took its author by surprise, as he thought he had made, with a close-knit team and a modest budget, a more confidential film than his previous ones. Hirokazu Kore-eda, who still writes, directs and edits the film himself, explains that he was inspired by news stories to imagine this "family of shoplifters" (the original title, in Japanese) to which, from the outset, one wants to belong. He wanted to show through it the richness of the bonds of the heart, the attention to the most fragile, the coexistence of generations; but also to highlight the life of these "invisible" people, more and more numerous, reduced to an extreme precariousness by ultraliberalism.
- Documentary about actress Romy Schneider.
- A one day story about 4 children and teens. Existential questionning, life and dreams of these growing ages, filmed in a right, tender but merciless accurate way.
- An examination of a married couple in disarray that subtly follows the young frustrated woman's quest for desire and pleasure. A portrait of a contemporary woman full of nuances and elusive feelings.
- Portrait of Edith Piaf, the embodiment of popular song and passion in love, through archival footage and numerous excerpts of songs.
- 2006– 9mTV-144.1 (13)TV EpisodeThese big names prove that you're never too famous to mess up. For this list, we revisit Ja Rule's infamous Fyre Festival disaster, M. Night Shyamalan's Avatar: The Last Airbender live-action film, Oprah Winfrey's OWN joint venture television network with Discovery, Inc., Eva Longoria's two defunct business, plus many others. Shyamalan won audiences over with inspired critical darlings like "The Sixth Sense" and "Unbreakable". Though his films were progressively less-well received after that, "The Last Airbender" was considered a colossal bomb. In his movie, the humor of the original show is practically nonexistent, the acting is awkward and the fast paced action is slowed to a crawl. Even the main character's name is pronounced differently. With a 6% rating on rotten tomatoes, it's a serious black mark on Shyamalan's resume.
- This documentary tells the story of how the Nazis stormed the fortress of law, how they gradually subjugated the judiciary and the legal system in order to assert the supremacy of the "people's community" over individual rights. This story is told through four singular destinies: Johann Reichhart, the Bavarian executioner and world record-holder for judicial executions; Lilo Gloeden, a committed woman; Werner Best, a Nazi jurist; and Hans Litten, a democratic lawyer. From 1933 to 1945, during the twelve years of the Nazi era, Hitler's courts handed down some 16,000 death sentences on their own soil. 30,000 more with the military tribunals.
- David Lynch Special.
- Lila is an 18-year-old girl living in Brest, France. She recently decided to wear a veil, to the dismay of her family. After an argument with her boyfriend, Lila does not feel like celebrating Eid at home and decides to slip away.
- A one-hour documentary exploring the frontier science known as cryonics (the practice of freezing the human body after death). "Heaven Can Wait" tracks the lives of three cryonicists.
- Mohammed, a young Palestinian, is desperately looking for a taxi to take him through an Israeli checkpoint. The driver, Farouk, discovers that Mohammed has already failed to cross the checkpoint. Trouble begins.
- Naples. A Virgin with bruise on her cheek who performs miracles. Three female characters, each connected to the Virgin in their own way but who never meet. Giusy, a girl in a wheelchair who had no right to a miracle; an atheist, free-spirited, and an anthropologist specializing in the worship of the Virgin Mary. Fabiana, a transsexual at the head of a troupe faithful supporters of the Virgin in a popular district of the city center. And Sue, a Korean pianist in search of a new direction for her life, teaching music to children in difficulty in a city far removed from her original culture. Each with their intimate wounds and each searching for a "miracle".
- Marie Berthelius and Roger Narbonne conference call Lars von Trier, Win Wenders, Lone Scherfig, and Jean-Marc Barr and are also linked by digital video. The discussion is about the Dogme 95 film movement and how technological transformations affect cinematic practice.