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1-50 of 3,157
- Speculating about the birth of Rock and Roll and the best curl pattern. This film explores Black queer identity and self acceptance as a pathway to personal utopia. Origin of Hair culls from Sister Rosetta Tharpe's legacy as a Black queer woman in the 50s and 60s claiming power through musical invention and radical self-love. In 1:06.
- An odd little record and video by Napoleon XIV (Jerry Samuels) that climbed all the way to the number 3 spot on Billboard's Hot 100 charts. And up the charts all over the world.
- Tells the story of a passer-by attempting to comfort a woman weeping beside a grave with the assurance that 'there is another man somewhere, besides your husband, with whom you can still be happy'. The woman answers that she agrees, and that this is where he is buried.
- You are a potential Terrorist and you have to be watched closely.
- Jean-Louis Aubert with Michel Houellebecq perform "Isolement" by Houellebecq.
- Instead of using tape splices 16mm wide, this film was edited by turning the splicer sideways to reveal the sprockets and the soundtrack. The long cuts run diagonally across the screen and, as the filmstrip slides by, the highest jumper shows the way to the herd.
- A cautionary tale about a coffee-swilling. A regular guy named Joe who's down on his luck and tries to drown his sorrows in coffee.
- "Song to the Siren" is a song written by Tim Buckley and his writing partner Larry Beckett and was first released on Buckley's 1970 album Starsailor. In 1983 This Mortal Coil recorded their version.
- Two young progressive people live together in the early 1960s. Their lives revolve around political activities, anti-nuclear actions, love, travel, music, drugs and poetry.
- The first documented Video Ping-Pong game, played in 1969. Played on the "brown box" -- the prototype for the computer consoles.
- Chamber Opera on Anna Odell's art project "Unknown Woman 2009-349701".
- A strictly serial, sequence technique: in various frame-sizes, the 48 portraits from the Szondi Test for "experimental diagnosis of human impulses" are shown in pre-specified lengths.
- Kastrierte Philosophen was founded in 1983 by Matthias Arfmann and Katrin Achinger. The band's wide musical spectrum included psychedelic rock , hip-hop , dub , electronic music and more. "Toilet Queen" became a minor hit in Central Europe.
- Published US Pentagon secret documents show that the US accepted the rise of the IS to weaken the regime in Syria. Similar to "Al-Qaeda" is a terrorist organization.
- The largest ocean in the world starts or ends at Monterey, California. It depends on what language you are speaking. My friend's wife had just left him. She walked right out the door and didn't even say good-bye.
- Alan Clarke was a huge influence on Gus Van Sant, Danny Boyle, Paul Greengrass, Harmony Korine and Bertrand Bonello, British film and TV director Alan Clarke was one of the poets of the Steadicam.
- The song does seem to deal with hell, or is it the hell of fame? Featuring the late singer/actress Karen Black and classic clips from her movies.
- "Kiska" is about a girl who's a badass. "Pu**y gonna sit on your face" - this is a mythical, crazy expression from the ghettos of Russia's Marino district. This is a message to everyone who doesn't believe in you, to all the haters and good-for-nothings.
- An image expose from the Macy Gray's "The Way" tour 2015.
- Holly Macve's debut single "No One Has the Answers" on Bella Union Records, London, UK.
- A lullaby before the great disaster. Two pigeons visit a zoo without animals, a snail measures his blood pressure at the doctor, in the CERN laboratory something has gone terribly wrong.
- Marlon Brando was asked by Warner Bros. to do a five-minute screen test in 1947 for their new project "Rebel Without a Cause". The studio abandoned the original project, and eventually revived it eight years.
- a track from the Father John Misty album "Fear Fun" (2012)
- The most notorious of the stories in Hubert Selby's "Last Exit to Brooklyn", published in 1964, is that of the young prostitute, Tralala. Born into Brooklyn's underclass, a tragic lost woman, who roam the streets, the hoods and the bars, for a grain of attention. She totally fails to recognize her one hope of salvation when it's staring her in the face.
- New York Citys Lower East Side in the early Eighties saw an explosion of the downtown film scene, as a variety of film-makers, photographers, performers and artists, inspired by the post-punk No Wave music scene.
- They were a great couple. But like all great couples, they could hardly believe it themselves and imagined that they wanted something completely different. With nothing in their hands but a chaotic life full of surprises, difficulties and lots of hiccup.
- One episode out of the American classic "City of Night" by John Rechy, originally published in 1963 in New York by Grove Press. "City of Night" is notable for its exposé approach to and stark depiction of hustling.
- Through the eyes of an individual young woman we experience an isolated, dystopian future-a world both compassionate and cruel, natural and digital. Without a sense of purpose the woman is all-consumed by her interactive device, a silent yet unrelenting antagonist that commands her attention.
- Trouble at a bridge opening.
- The flight and pursuit of the robber murderer Rudolf Hennig over the roofs of Berlin. Henning had made friends, robbed and later killed the waiter August Giernoth.
- "Girls Are Smarter" - Two girls during one evening, longing for the big sisters, drinking in the school yard, recharging for the party, the party and that boring end to it. At the same time, various claims about girls are rolling by on the screen.
- This song embarked the second generation of Now. In may 2007. Eric brought the nasty beats to my ears. The first set of lyrics included a lot of naive name-drops, like William Shakespeare, Gloria Swanson and Tim Berners-Lee.
- Utterances of streetsweepers, merchants, commuters, the shrilling of the traffic controllers' relentless whistle, reverberations of the mariachi trumpeter and the lucha libre announcer, murmuring of women's incantations to raise the Virgin of Guadalupe. Mexico City is a cacophony of human-urban analogy, chaotic and coherent, syncopated and synchronised. In a moment of solitude, the jaded commuter, the indigent vendor, the agonised woman seek stillness, detachment, solace within and away from the gritos de la ciudad, the cries of Mexico City. As she writhes, convulses, thrashes over the concrete steps, the city follows her, consoling and devouring her in its revolutions of chaos, flux, madness.
- Explores the notion of pairs and doubles, alienation and urban ennui. We are bystanders to a drama between two women in an ambiguous relationship with objects masquerading as third and fourth characters: the We Table, a table whose top, a one way mirror, invites both vanity and voyeurism; and Dutch designer Eelko Moorer's sole-less stilt footwear.
- Acts of war in the Balkans and the Middle East. Exclusive footage captured on location, in the air and on the ground. All participants agree with the nature of the project.
- About Lola Montez (1821-1861) who was an Irish dancer and actress who became famous as a "Spanish dancer", courtesan, and mistress of King Ludwig I of Bavaria, who made her Countess of Landsfeld. She used her influence to institute liberal reforms.
- There's a whisper of reverb around almost every element on Ariadna, which glues the tracks together with a well-worn patina. Transitioning from a software-only approach to classic analog synthesizers like Roland's SH-101 and Juno 106, Yana Kedrina/Kedr Livanskiy maintains the aesthetic she embraced on January Sun while using era-specific equipment better suited to the windswept air that characterizes her tracks.
- An abstract film shot in super 8 features figures moving in the foreground and background of an empty space holding mirrors which occasionally flash in the lens of the camera. The images portrayed in the film are reminiscent of Jarman's "Abstract Landscape" paintings of the same period.
- Loosely based on Lolita Lebron, the Puerto Rican nationalist who led an attack on the U.S. House of Representatives in 1954 to draw attention to the cause of independence for her island home. Contains short video and audio samples of West Side Story, A Streetcar Named Desire, The Wizard of Oz, Silence of The Lambs, and Rebecca directed by Alfred Hitchcock. It also contains war and protest footage, and newsreels of Lotila Lebron's arrest. Costumes are modeled after the suit Lolita Lebron was wearing during the attack, military gear, and American fashion in the 1950's.
- French Television interviews Arthur and France Janov about Primal Theraphy, the book "The Primal Scream" and shows excerpts from therapy sessions.
- There is only one thing that can save the shoemaker. Earth from a cemetery, tells the superstitious shoemaker Hakim to his failed apprentice Konstantin who, despite his skepticism, brings the earth to him. Suddenly Konstantin is a fantastic shoemaker and customers flow to the store. But will the price of success be too high for any of them to pay?
- An 'Apache dance' was performed for the off-beat crowd of the Parisian underworld, who called themselves Apaches. This had nothing in common with the Native American tribe in North America.
- The Honeymoon Killers live at the legendary Manchester club The Haçienda in Nov. 1982.
- Sims and Fleischner, dressed in gowns, frantically jump up and down in front of a flickering television set in Smith's Lower East Side apartment. Overstimulated was later inter-cut with newsreel footage of the 1940 Republican Convention for Smith's Horror and Fantasy at Midnight program, which then evolved into his last feature, No President.
- "The Answering Machine" - Carla arrives at her flat with a suitcase full of money. The pressing messages from her husband asking her to return his calls can be heard repeatedly on the answering machine. Carla thinks she has sorted out her future without considering a fatal outcome.
- Ralph "Sonny" Barger - President of the Oakland Chapter of the Hell's Angels - I volunteer a group of loyal Americans for behind the line duty in Vietnam. We feel that a crack group of trained guerrillas could demoralize the Viet Cong.
- "Marcia Baïla" is a 1984 song recorded by the French duet Les Rita Mitsouko. It was the third single from their first album, "Rita Mitsouko", and was released in April of that year. Produced by Conny Plank.
- Approximately thirty images comprise Oblivion. Most obsessively repeat themselves. Although the images appear to be solarized, the film was actually contact-printed, combining high contrast black and white negative with a colour positive of the same image.
- Brooklyn Bridge, NYC. Early in the morning on July 22, 2014, the two American flags attached to poles atop each tower were found to have been replaced by American flags that had been bleached white.
- A young man comes home after an unsuccessful job interview, where his girlfriend is already expecting him. While he is in front of the Bathroom mirror struggles with, whether he should confess her failure, he faces himself with his various inner voices, who are as diverse as the people who have influenced him and his self-image so far. They give him advice, encourage him or call him a loser, until he finally finds his own voice and makes his decision.