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1-27 of 27
- A wealthy New York City investment banking executive, Patrick Bateman, hides his alternate psychopathic ego from his co-workers and friends as he delves deeper into his violent, hedonistic fantasies.
- James, an NYC cop, is hired by Agent K of a secret government agency that monitors extraterrestrial life on Earth. Together, they must recover an item that has been stolen by an intergalactic villain.
- A bookish CIA researcher in Manhattan finds all his co-workers dead, and must outwit those responsible until he figures out who he can really trust.
- A deeply personal coming-of-age story about the strength of family and the generational pursuit of the American Dream.
- The life of a divorced television writer dating a teenage girl is further complicated when he falls in love with his best friend's mistress.
- An Interpol agent attempts to expose a high-profile financial institution's role in an international arms dealing ring.
- Beth is an ambitious young New Yorker who is completely unlucky in love. On a whirlwind trip to Rome, she impulsively steals some coins from a reputed fountain of love, and is then aggressively pursued by a band of suitors.
- The life of a businessman begins to change after he inherits six penguins, and as he transforms his apartment into a winter wonderland, his professional side starts to unravel.
- A surprisingly resourceful housewife vows revenge on her husband when he begins an affair with a wealthy romance novelist.
- A dentist pretends to be married to avoid commitment, but when he falls for his girlfriend and proposes, he must recruit his lovelorn nurse to pose as his wife.
- A married New York cop falls for the socialite murder witness he's been assigned to protect.
- Modern-day New York City adaptation of Shakespeare's immortal story about Hamlet's plight to avenge his father's murder.
- The third film of a five-part art-installation epic -- it's part-zombie movie, part-gangster film.
- Frank Lloyd Wright is America's greatest ever architect. But few people know about the Welsh roots that shaped his life and world-famous buildings. Now, leading Welsh architect Jonathan Adams sets off across America to explore Frank Lloyd Wright's masterpieces for himself. Along the way, he uncovers the tempestuous life story of the man behind them, and the secrets of his radical Welsh background . In a career spanning seven decades, Frank Lloyd Wright built over 500 buildings, and changed the face of modern architecture.
- A college student trying to decide on a career spends the summer before his senior year assisting social workers.
- The Cremaster Cycle: A Conversation with Matthew Barney follows the artist and New York Times art critic, Michael Kimmelman as they discuss his mythic display at the Guggenheim Museum. While guiding the camera through his sculptures and films, Barney tells Kimmelman about his process, vision and intentions when creating the "Cremaster Cycle". The sculptures, constructed from the artist's signature materials, including plastic, metal, and Vaseline, are three-dimensional incarnations of characters and settings seen in Barney's films. They exist independently but embody the same content, now expressed in space rather than time.
- 'What About American History' is an experimental short movie. The film has been made without a script, only using documentary footage, shot during several journey's throughout the United States. We follow the abstract tale of 4 young men. They are connected in a random way. They are bystanders in each others unique and abnormal situation. They are all partially masked. There is the idea of a constructed chaos. Questions about the self occur. Through the edit itself, this 'identity question', becomes the main theme of the film. On a specific moment the video screen breaks into two pieces. We see a transformation of the screen itself: two rectangles changing, slowly morphing into a face made of moving video cadres. The screen itself is becoming a face, a mask, starring at the audience. In a very organic way, this film enlarges its own theme and is growing into a very special own universe. -Inventing a new language, it is the task of the audience to find a key into this world of new myths. It is absurdism. It is a visual game. It is about filmic tools, it is about form. It is about playing with the rules of narrative cinema. It is about creating suspension. It is a way of thinking and rethinking concepts on a visual level. But it is also a pure philosophical expansion: trying to dig into the created fiction of the blackness of the video screen itself: how the black screen is taking over, how the frames are fighting with the wideness of the framework. The black. Always the black. What About American History is an associative journey into a world full of masks, tv and mystery. It explores new visual forms in video and narratives. And while doing so, it comments on a contemporary America and how we, as the mondial current generation, are influenced by its culture.
- Pat Steir: Artist is a profoundly personal portrait of the groundbreaking woman painter by her friend, novelist and filmmaker Veronica Gonzalez Peña - the result is an intimate, character driven, revelatory film.
- Erik Satie's Vexations is a short piano piece to be repeated 840 times. Satie may not have meant for it to be played, but John Cage-attracted to its serial nature-staged it in New York in 1963. The performance lasted almost 19 hours.
- Archival footage, still photographs, and contemporary interviews tell the story of Hilla Rebay (1890-1967), who convinced Solomon Guggenheim to establish the Guggenheim Foundation to promote and collect non-objective art, build the museum that bears his name, and use Frank Lloyd Wright as its architect. The film's thesis is that without Hilla there would be no museum. It traces her early talent, friendships in Zurich with artists, falling in love with Rudolf Bauer, coming to America in 1927, and becoming Guggenheim's guide to modern art. The arrogant Bauer spurns her, Guggenheim's death leads to her dismissal from the foundation, but she maintains her high spirits to the end.
- Avant garde artist and bohemian Emile Norman is profiled and his life as an out and proud gay man in Big Sur, California is examined.
- Episode 2 is set in the American metropolis - the soaring new cities of the East Coast with their futuristic skylines and lofty skyscrapers. Instead of looking up at the futuristic towers, Waldemar explores the squalid boxing rings painted by George Bellows all the way to the harsh immigrant experience of Ellis Island and the profound impact that rootlessness had on the art of Mark Rothko.
- Still in shock from Becca's news, Marcus turns to friends and family for support before leaning on an unlikely source. As a wave of complicated emotions wash over him, he embraces the possibility of major life changes.