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- The Producing and Directing team of Trinity Houston and David Minasian teamed up with the Alan Parsons Live Project and the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra for this 50th Anniversary tribute to NASA and the Apollo 11 moon landing.
- A journalist from Tel Aviv and filmmaker from New York City - friends since junior high - discuss the impact of disingenuous media practices, while spearheading a conversation about how to achieve a less deceptive future for global media.
- A music video for What Happens to Us (Part I) from the album Alone Together Forever. Bonjour Machines visit a rock climbing gym.
- A music video starring Nikolija filmed in Tel Aviv, Israel.
- Documentary style music video portraying beautiful landscapes of Israel and hip hop superstar Nikolija as a toned down natural beauty
- Every Sunday, Avshalom and David stroll around town with glass shards.
- A short documentary film depicting the hours before the Israeli TV and film workers unions protest in 2009.
- The amazing story of a Radio-addict, the queen of music trivia, Rebbeca De Solarsky. Her home is decorated with knitted pictures, porcelain dolls and plastic flowers. At night, when she goes out "clubbing" she wears lace-gloves and dazzling neck-ties. A true portrait from the decaying inner-city of Tel Aviv.
- Vic and Nimi is a film about two siblings living together, trying to find themselves. Nimi is playing a game with an unloaded gun, pretending to shoot himself. Things get complicated when Vic decides to load the gun without him knowing.
- A three chapters video about patients in a Persistent Vegetative State (PVS). Shot at the Head Injury departments of Reuth Medical Center in Tel Aviv, 'Shift' documents the lives of patients, their families and various care staff.
- During the 1980s in the German industrial Ruhrgebiet a young man takes up acting lessons at his private teacher's house. One day he finds out something unsettling: looking out the window in his teacher's living room for a brief moment only he sees his teacher's homeland Israel. Today, thirty years on, the former student - under the impression of the ongoing conflicts in the Middle East - is packing up his bags and traveling to Israel to pursue his teacher's traces. He is carrying his teacher's house folded up as excess baggage - it is going to be installed in the foreign landscape of Israel: a room for remembrance, a border between home and away, a house as well as a landscape. The autobiographical film is a montage of documentary and fictional material. It is retracing the acting student's path from thirty years ago and accompanying today's search for his teacher's trajectory. Joseph Millo, in 1944, was the founder of the Cameri Theatre in Tel Aviv. The search makes us witness many encounters between the student and people who knew his teacher in Germany and Israel. It focuses on questions about the meaning of home, of tradition - and of the power of Performing Arts.
- Joe sitting in a bar and thinking about the bitter world, he feels that he has to die.
- "Safe-Up" security for women by women: a talk with Safe Up's founder and chief executive, Neta Schrieber. A look at a new, solution based strategy for forrest fire fighting, a chat with Fighting Tree Top Fire's Dan Leigh, on Mt Hertzyl. A Zika reduction project n Brazil, a discussion with Forrest Innovation's founder Nitzam Paldi: three portraits of global heroes.
- A documentary about the community of African refugees and asylum seekers who have settled in Israel.
- A documentary of female artist. A non-aggressive, individual revolution against the bourgeoisie.
- The life of a whole family is changing once the father decides to request something.
- Eddy Guiness is visiting Israel after publishing a best seller in German about a devastating romance he has had in his youth with a depressed woman. In the middle of his book tour she appears and threatens him with a libel charge.
- A picture in a normal Israeli day. What lies beneath that image?
- Kfar Shalem is a peripheral, poverty-stricken neighborhood in Tel Aviv. For years, the local authorities have oppressed the residents and evicted them from their homes. Shortly before the old-established residents lose their homes and his neighborhood is erased by big white skyscrapers, the director embarks on a personal journey through Kfar Shalem and explores questions of identity and belonging.
- Tel Aviv teenager Daniella keeps singing "The Man I Love" to herself, until the day she meets Michal, a 32-year-old sculptress. A love affair ensues.
- The Hasan Arfa Compound, an assembly of small workshops and garages built on a deserted Arab grove, is a neglected enclave in the heart of Tel Aviv, occupied by people on the margins of society. Today, it is in the process of demolition, and new high-rises are being planned on its ruins. Attay, a metal workshop owner, has received an eviction notice but refuses to leave, despite continuous threats from local outlaws. Andrey, once a respected graphic designer in the USSR, is now mostly drunk, and addicted to "Nice Guy." Misha, who wants to flee the country but is tied down by an old debt, is building his escape raft. Homeless Yitzhak narrates the plot of his disappearing reality with encyclopedic knowledge. Like a modern day forsaken town in the Wild West-money, principles, and despair meet for one final duel.
- The story of Salomonico who works in the Tel Aviv Port and tries to defend his house and his life.
- Victor Grayevsky entered the pantheon of Israeli intelligence thanks to a single courageous and heroic action. While a journalist in Poland and at great personal risk, Grayevsky transferred to the West a secret document - the speech of Nikita Khrushchev, which first revealed Stalin's crimes. Just prior to his death in 2007 it turned out that Grayevsky has kept another secret - alongside his day job on the Voice of Israel radio station, he secretly worked as a spy, seemingly in the service of the Soviet Union but, in fact, for Israel. Apollonia follows the story of the man and spy and tries to make sense of a number of questions arising from his story and mysterious character. The film also offers hints and insights not only into the past but also into what might be secretly happening these days, as the Cold war is heating up again.
- While saying goodbye to his son and grandchildren who are leaving Israel, Yackov remembers when, as a child, he also said goodbye to his family in Poland in 1937, not realizing that he would never see them again.
- God's voice speaks to A. Having left religion, his home and his family, A. reflects on how good a person he is.
- A young man meets a teen-aged boy in a public launderette.
- David Perlov presents an Israeli microcosm in the mosaic of life on a short and narrow Tel Aviv street, in the heart of the "city".