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- During a trip to Rome, a debauched Shakespearian actor is tormented by fans, the press, the Italian film industry and the Devil - who appears as a little girl seeking to collect his head.
- John Waters' first sixteen-millimetre film, about a deranged nanny who kidnaps young girls and forces them to 'model themselves to death' in front of her boyfriend and their crazed friends. It was never shown commercially.
- A hot young vixen is kidnapped and raped by a dangerous gang of heroin smugglers, who rape and kill anyone who gets in their way. Then a tough private detective is hired to track down the bastards.
- An alien visits earth and records its experiences.
- The film deals with varying subjects: the colonial alienation, the transition to neocolonialism, the National Independence of Guinea, and finally, the recapture of Africa's distorted past.
- Comedy about "Finger Pressing" treatment.
- Le film raconte l'histoire d'un paysan breton vivant à Néant-sur-Yvel (Morbihan) obligé d'abandonner sa terre pour aller travailler dans l'usine Citroën près de Rennes. Brault décrit le contexte socio-culturel de la Bretagne en 1968 et des changements inévitables nés des innovations techniques.
- Australian cinema from the very beginning, from the newsreels, ethnographic and actuality films to the controversy of "The Story of the Kelly Gang" to the success of "The Sentimental Bloke". Australian cinema was making its mark.
- A controversial depiction of Kristofferskolan - a Waldorff school in Bromma, Stockholm.
- Documentary of James Baldwin and Dick Gregory discussing the Civil Rights Movement in 1960s Great Britian.
- Kitaro, a ghost, spends his afterlife helping humans in need of his skills. He thwarts the plans of evil spirits who live to torment humanity.
- The masked criminal Kilink returns to confront the Frankenstein monster in this great, hilarious, over-the-top episode, upping the horror theme in these unique, imaginative B-grade treasures.
- There is much more in using a fighting chair to land large big game species than sitting down and pulling on the rod. This video shows you how to do it!
- In January 1968, the filmmaker obtained permission to shoot the film for the press ball in Berlin. In front of the camera, behind the table with press magnate Axel C. Springer and others.
- Bigfoot: America's Abominable Snowman focuses on the legend of Bigfoot/Sasquatch throughout North America. Dr. John Napier acts as host and analyst of the evidence presented in the documentary, including Roger Patterson's famous October 1967 film allegedly showing a Bigfoot in Northern California (Bluff Creek). Numerous eyewitness testimonies are given along with expert opinions on the subject matter.
- Three sailors are talked into trying LSD and marijuana--which, this film implies, are basically the same thing--and the effects of the drugs endanger the lives of their fellow sailors aboard ship.
- Erwin Leiser interviews Fritz Lang about his directorial career.
- The Capuchin priest, who spent about 60 years in a southern Italian monastery and who had the stigma of Christ for about 50 years, is best known for many miracles and supernatural gifts or for special knowledge that he had as a confessor.
- A pitch-black and milk-white film shot during one of Olivier Mosset's exhibition openings. A psychedelic game of improvisation joins the Zanzibar group with Salvador Dalí, Barbet Schroeder, and Jean Mascolo - the solarized image reminiscent of thick strokes of a paintbrush.
- In 1968, Noren finished Huge Pupils, a gorgeous, sensuous, sexually outrageous visual study of his daily life, and part I of an ongoing series he would come to call The Adventures of the Exquisite Corpse.
- In the movie it is told (on the basis of scientific these 1960th years) about physical conditions on the planet Mars, a possibility of life and hypothetical forms of vegetation on her, about "canals" and "seas" of the red planet. The director has tried to recreate environment of one of the most mysterious planet of solar system.
- In Hiroshima, the victims of the atomic bomb are still dying. Japanese belief says that the one who creates a thousand cranes from paper, will recover. Little Sadako Sasaki died of radiation sickness before making a thousand paper birds. Her monument is symbolically decorated with countless paper garlands.
- The Case of The Missing Scene is a children's crime thriller that has been designed in the tradition of classic British children's films. A camera team takes pictures of rare birds from a hide when a poacher happens to get into the picture. The evidence (namely shot 63) disappears under mysterious circumstances. As always in these films, the case can only be solved with the help of a few bright children.
- "A rare behind-the-scenes view of the exploding New York "underground" in the late sixities, a turbulent time and place that was to change American culture forever. A German TV crew, led by journalist Gideon Bachmann, explores the epicenter of the sixties revolution in art, music, poetry and film and interviews the main players in the "New American Cinema," that was born on the streets of New York. Against a backdrop of cultural upheaval in all of the arts and growing political agitation against the Vietnam War, Bachman interviews the most prominent figures in "underground film," including Jonas Mekas, Shirley Clarke, the Kuchar Brothers and Bruce Connor, and visits the most notorious location in the New York art world of the era - Andy Warhol's Factory - to conduct an interview with the genius of Pop Art himself." Scott Hammen.
- John Lennon cracks a grin in super slow motion, with a garden providing the backdrop and sound.
- BBC documentary on the long and flamboyant career of French filmmaker Abel Gance.
- Marilyn Coleman's North Philadelphia was not only unique because of its subject matter. Made at the tail end of television's black and white era when film still dominated documentaries, the program was shot as they are today, entirely on video. In 1967 this was not easy to do because it required lugging around a full sized truck and trailer mobile unit. When parked at the North Philadelphia locations, labor intensive camera cables had to be strung from the production truck to sites sometimes blocks away.
- A non-narrative patchwork of images, light, music, conversation, news headlines, the passing of generations, and, ultimately, a journey from New York City to Martha's Vineyard in an attempt to discover a man named Chandler Moore.