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
1-13 of 13
- About Dmitri Tsafendas, who assassinated South African prime minister Dr Verwoerd in 1966. The film is built around a submission to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. The music, scored for string quartet, is based on the traditional Afrikaans song 'Sarie Marais' and includes an arrangement of the original.
- Greece in 2015: the economy is in tatters and the country is on the verge of bankruptcy. A new government rebels against the EU's iron-fisted rule and inspires millions of Europeans. Based on the political memoirs of Yanis Varoufakis.
- Interviews with male prostitutes in Dublin city are repeated on camera by actors nonetheless cast in shadow as if they were the people in question. This footage is interspersed with grainy hand held, slow motion images of actors playing out typical rent boy scenes.
- Describes how to resist the deception and pressure used to recruit members into cults and keep them there. It also provides advice on how to resist these tactics. The video is designed for young people, parents, educators, counselors, clergy, law enforcement officials, and others.
- Captures the music and travels of that time. Some of it is shot in New Orleans, some is shot in Canada with a cool visit to the house of my Québécois relatives. Aaron Neville is a guest singer, Bono's also in there somewhere. There's a visit to Peter Gabriel's studio shot on super 16 by Declan Quinn. Directed by music historian Philip King.
- Tangier, beginning of autumn. Dounia Abdallah, Moroccan, and Dimitri Barbarossa, Franco-Serbian, are lovers. They work together at the construction of a luxurious villa for a Gibraltar based company. The excavation works reveal Christian graves from the 4th century, adorned by frescos. For Dounia and Dimitri, this discovery is a unique occasion to change their life course. But one of the construction worker disappears.
- The Process Church of the Final Judgment was the apocalyptic shadow side of the flower-powered 60s and perhaps the most notorious cult of modern times. Timothy Wyllie was the first member and the art director of the cult's magazine. The group's apocalyptic theology brought on accusations of sinister conspiracies as scores of black-cloaked devotees swept the streets of London, NY, New Orleans and other cities selling magazines with titles likes Love, Fear, Sex and Death. Timothy Wyllie is the author of "Love, Sex, Fear, Death", published by Feral House.
- Follows South African songwriter, David Kramer and slide guitarist, Hannes Coetzee into remote regions of South Africa on their quest to find musicians who play an almost forgotten folk music - By the end of the journey, nine musicians are invited to Cape Town where they record some of their songs and performed at the Baxter Theatre Centre".
- Leona is a nightclub singer in Los Angeles. In the video she sits in her living room, sings short demonstrations of songs, and comments upon each of them. She alternates between performing and speaking about her life as both a private and a public person. She addresses the person behind the camera, the audience watching the video almost 'becomes' this person and it creates an intimate space between the viewer and the subject.
- In a post-apocalyptic era, the prophecies roll against an unknown recipient, as religious messages from secular temples. The media's neon signs shine in the night and a lost soul wanders through life without apparently meeting anyone else. Are we at the end of the world, the end or the rebirth?
- A man digs a hole in the earth while he describes and reflects on his life. By looking back on parts of his own history he comes closer to some form of reconciliation with it. The work brings to mind how words anchor us in reality but also keep us imprisoned in our own narratives.
- There was a big hill behind our house, and it took about twenty minutes at a brisk pace to get to the top of it. By by the time I hauled myself up there, Headlights on the Parade was about halfway through. I had a 360 degree view of nothing but glorious Scottish countryside.
- The Process is a tricky business. It reveals how psychodrama, long recognized as a valuable tool in therapy, can help people deal with addictions and the effects of dysfunctional family life. The tricky part is that the slick way in which it has been assembled and compressed to fit a 70-minute running time makes the treatment seem easier than surely it must be. We are told upfront that the film, unscripted and unrehearsed, will gather nine people, led by psychodrama expert Dr. Tian Dayton, who will be trying to put their lives together over a series of group therapy sessions.