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 382
- The first video features Crow standing in the middle of a street playing a guitar while a second Crow is throwing her possessions (and eventually herself) out of an apartment building window. This video was shot in black and white.
- When two sushi waiters are pushed to the limit... Only justice can be served.
- Movie fans reenact their favorite movie scenes word by word. This film focusing on the life of American movie buffs and their passion for movies and why visual story-telling is important in their life.
- In this entry of Columbia's "Cavalcade of Broadway" shorts (production number 2653) in which Broadway columnist Earl Wilson conducted tours of The Big Apple, Wilson wanders on down to Greenwich Village and visits a nightspot known as "The Village Barn." This was when most of the music played there was called "hillbilly" in the days before Nashville went pretentious and dubbed it "Country-Western." Featured the night Mr. Wilson dropped by were Dick Thomas and His Santa Fe Rangers and Rosalie Allen, one of the best of the yodeling singers.
- Jeremy Worker is a young singer. He came to NYC at the age of 19 in pursuit of success. Jeremy shares a day in his life during a time in which he occasionally lacks inspiration and finds hope and comfort in his friends and fellow artists.
- Four comic vignettes -- involving an activist, a balding writer, some Jews, and Troma Entertainment President Lloyd Kaufman -- connect in a stream-of-consciousness style reminiscent of Monty Python, The Firesign Theatre, and Luis Bunuel.
- Sonia has a surprise visit from her estranged sister Claire.
- Both a lyrical ode to New York and a dreamy vision of two lost souls searching for happiness in the contemporary world, where angels dwell among men. The short film 'My Bethesda Angel' is a poetic story, told through lyrical visuals and sparse dialogue.
- Documentary short takes a tour of the New York City film locations of Speedy (1928) such as Times Square, Washington Square, Sheridan Square, Coney Island and Brooklyn.
- This limited collectors' edition video compilation spans Chris Whitley's career over three decades. The collection includes never-before-seen interview and live footage of Whitley busking in NYC's Washington Square Park in the late 70's, his short journey into Euro-glamland in the mid 80's, three Dirt Floor (1998) video and tour gems and live footage from the Rocket House (2001) 2001 Summer Tour.
- Sonia explores herself in the first part of this three part series.
- A humorous travelogue exploring the social and culture aspects of New York's famed Greenwich Village area.
- José Feliciano hosts an hour of music with special guests Carol Lawrence and the Mike Curb Congregation, taped on location in New York City's Central Park and Washington Square.
- The U.S. promotional video for Boy Krazy's 1993 single "That's What Love Can Do" No.18 on Billboard.
- The impact artists have upon the audience is immense, and likewise is the effort those artists put into producing your entertainment, be them pianists, poets, or filmmakers alike, all of them, it seems, are working for tips nevertheless.
- Naturalist Burton Hoary continues his on-going survey of the masked descendants of the human race who inhabit the toxic landscape known as "The Acrid Plain". This chapter focuses on the Harvesters, their obscure rituals and the perils they face.
- New York 2035. The digitization of humanity has begun. By recording all the information contained in DNA and spinal fluid, an entire human can now be compressed on to any digital storage format... immortally. During a routine monitoring session, a freelance data compressor scrambles to save his own files and memories from a system-wide crash, as they visually unfold before him.
- A couple goes on a journey to find the perfect brunch.
- Hot movie show thing is even better than Shrek on ice.
- John Borske, Patricia Dillon, and Gerald Jacuzzo participate in a Q&A session at a theatrical screening of the Andy Milligan films Vapors (1965) and Seeds of Sin (1968) at the Quad Cinema in Greenwich Village, New York City.
- Set during a U.S. military operation in the Korean War, the film follows Private Samuel Rosenberg, a sensitive and thoughtful young soldier who recently lost two best friends in battle. For his first assignment following a brief psych leave, he's charged with transporting a captured enemy soldier across no man's land to the prisoner transfer station. Over the course of their journey through dense Korean forest, Rosenberg finds himself unable to communicate with the other soldier, but a shocking revelation pushes him to his limits, forcing him to look his enemy in the eye. What follows changes both men and their understanding of war forever.
- Actor/Director Vincent Shkreli shows what America is all about within concerns involving controversial issues that stems from 'The War in Iraq' to '2008 Election' in a satiric way.
- Kevin, a narcissistic, fading movie actor, and John, a visually impaired man, the subject of his latest film, clash over the unpredictable nature of life.
- A man makes a deal to try to save his sister's life and gets a surprise encounter with an old friend.
- New York City cop George O'Dowd is putting in his last night on the force before retiring. When he comes upon a black kid drinking in a closed park, he decides to arrest him but before he does the two talk and form a connection.
- For three days, at one Greenwich Village payphone, hundreds of New Yorkers tried to get through to the President. With both humor and sincerity, New Yorkers fed quarters into a payphone and braved busy signals and excessive hold times to get their voices heard on topics such as the environment, health care, gay marriage, the war in Iraq, and much more.
- From the mind of Brooklyn actor, performance artist and hip-hop activist Danny Hoch, this film spins out the stories of ten lives shocked by globalization, the prison industry and life in general.
- Official music video for "Summer in the City" by Joe Cocker.
- Cat Vicious is a rising shock jock podcast DJ, with a nihilistic on air personality, who spends most of her show mocking and belittling her listeners. But when a mysterious caller pirates her frequency, things take a turn for the terrifying as Cat ultimately realizes that her beloved radio station might soon become her tomb. Can she survive the night or will this be her last broadcast?
- When underworld kingpin Eddie Wise calls in a gangland-style execution right in front of his nemesis, Miles Gage, the detective knows he's been slapped in the face; what he doesn't know is that this murder case will be his last.
- Patty Baring will lose the fine old Washington Square house she is to inherit if her scheming stepfather Josiah Wheeler's plan to acquire it for himself is successful. Cruelly abused by Wheeler, a gambling hall owner, Patty runs away to live with a newsboy named Bobby and his grandfather Herman. There, in spite of her shabby dress and humble companions, she arouses the admiration of Edwin Sayer, the district attorney. Ned, a soft-spoken gambler, desires to possess Patty, and at the instigation of her stepfather, lures her into a gambling den that Edwin has been planning to raid. Patty is arrested, but Edwin secures her release and places her in the charge of his mother. Ned and Josiah are imprisoned, leaving Patty free to claim her inheritance and wed Edwin.
- Andrew Kane, the spoiled and wayward son of once wealthy parents, vies with stockbroker James Surbrun for the hand of Jule Grayton, the wild and willful daughter of a philanthropist. Accused of murdering his rival, Kane is convicted but later cleared of the charge. The "wild" couple settle down and find happiness in reconciliation.
- A mondo type exploitation "documentary" about debauched practices of modern Man.