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- The French controversial author Gabriel Matzneff talks about film/cinema and his taste and flavors, without editing or interruptions.
- "If you continue to be such a 'nfama it is better for me to die", warns Tore his evocative girlfriend Margaretella. Later when they both meet with their friends at the Rouge Tavern the wild dancing turns into a fight between Tore and his rival Max.
- Originally a twenty five hour film made up of shorter film segments. It consists of 83 reels each lasting approximately 33 minutes. A short story odyssey of film designed to be shown with two projectors playing simultaneously.
- A young woman gets tired of society's patriarchal order and women's sexual bondage.
- Axel is courting women in large quantities. He increasingly conscious and excessively uses his innate and viable charm, evolving into a pure Don Juan.
- How New Yorkers reacted to having Kim Jong-un walking the streets of the Big Apple. The walk took place in three neighborhoods: Harlem, Wall Street, and Koreatown. New York definitely took notice. A positive reception. There was a lot of comedy, a little bit of catcalling and only a tiny bit of street harassment.
- About the 10th anniversary of the band Feeling B - a punk rock band founded in East Berlin in 1983 - at the Hiddenseeparty in 1993. On 9 Nov. 1989, when the Berlin Wall fell, Feeling B was performing in West Berlin as part of a gig endorsed by the socialist government in order to promote the GDR. Some of the members of Feeling B transformed into Rammstein in 1994.
- Since the 1990s, the American Raymond Pettibon has been one of the most influential visual artists in the world and has found a place in the world's most prestigious institutions, from the Museum of Modern Art in New York to the Documenta in Kassel to the Venice Biennale. His artistic universe of fragments of images and text - record covers, video films and thousands of drawings.
- Only 10 students can get a seat at the Academy for the Unknown. Over 200 people have applied to the school and now they must convince the jury that they have the right ability. But can they, in just five minutes, reveal who is hidden behind a screen?
- 100 days has passed since the parliamentary election September 19, 2010. What immediate impact has the Sweden Democrats (SD) had so far?
- Claude, a shy young filmmaker wants to make a biopic about a former television host from the 1960's-1970's Serge Laprade. He agrees to cooperate but when he views footage of himself from his early shows, he becomes bitter. He drops out of the project and disappears.
- From late January to mid-February 1976 a dozen West German poets, novelists and playwrights, all born between 1938 and 1947 and therefore part of the youngest post WWII generation of writers at the time, visited the U.S.A.
- On August 13, 1961, the Communist government of the German Democratic Republic (GDR, or East Germany) began to build a barbed wire and concrete "Antifascistischer Schutzwall," or "antifascist bulwark," between East and West Berlin.
- An in-depth look at the prison system in the United States and how it reveals the nation's history of racial inequality.
- After five years of civil war in Cambodia, on April 17, 1975, the Khmer Rouge entered the capital and overthrew the regime of General Lon Nol, supported by the Americans. The new masters of the country on the same day order the inhabitants of Phnom Penh to evacuate the city. By throwing the population of urban centers onto the roads, the Khmer Rouge carried out their plan of forced ruralization.
- Depicts the events in Gloucester, Massachusetts, when an unusually large number of teenage girls turned up for pregnancy tests at the clinic of a school. Within hours the news of an alleged 'pregnancy pact' had traveled round the world, appearing in newspapers, TV bulletins and chat shows. Town officials denied the rumors.
- The year 1929 is the year of "Babylon Berlin". "1929 - The Year Babylon" tells the twelve months as a year of decisions. Land and city are on the edge, the future is open, nobody knows where the journey is going. The First World War has been over for a good ten years, the defeat not understood, the Republic a permanent state of emergency.
- Coming from all social strata, a priory model citizens of the Third Reich, one thing unites these women: hatred against the Hitler regime and the desire to end the Führer.
- Autumn 1946, Germany is devastated. For three months, a young Swedish journalist, Stig DAGERMAN, wanders in the ruins of the German cities destroyed by the bombing of the allies.
- 1952 - the highlight of the Cold War. Enbom tells a spectacular story about his ongoings to a friend. This leads all the way up to to the Defense Minister Torsten Nilsson. The Enbom affair is being disclosed. The police starts ab interrogation. The media cover the story. Lots of untrue statements and straight out lies are published. Six defendants are sentenced to severe punishment against their denial.
- A summer of the past decades has been so strongly remembered as the hot summer of 1968. A change of mentality began that has influenced the way of life, especially in industrialized countries, even today. The whole world was seething, in the United States there were numerous demonstrations against the Vietnam War, in Paris the students fought together with the workers against the authorities, in Germany the students protested against the visit of the Shah of Persia.
- 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.
- A three-part story of Norway's worst terrorist attack in which over seventy people were killed. 22 July looks at the disaster itself, the survivors, Norway's political system and the lawyers who worked on this horrific case.
- On 22 July 2011, Anders Behring Breivik bombed government buildings in Oslo, resulting in eight deaths. He then arrived at Utøya island, the site of a camp for Worker's Youth League, posing as a police officer killing 69 people.
- July 22, 2011. The darkest day in Norwegian post-war history told through the victims, the survivors and the emergency states. Minute by minute we follow the events until midnight. We see with what force the bomb spreads destruction and death in the Government Quarter, and we meet young people on Utøya who have seen their closest friends being killed.
- According to legend, the Mustaphas were smuggled out of their mysterious Balkan hometown of Szegerely (where they played at the Crazy Loquat Club) in refrigerators, ending up in England.
- Three short stories of very black comedy, about family, the media and children's beauty pageants.
- In this work we measure ourselves through the arc of light and shadow. We step into our shadows only to escape them in our nostalgia for the light. Swallowing clouds we pass through the deliciousness of our desires, knowing we cannot have one without the other.
- Police inspector Jensen orders an entire house to be evacuated because of a bomb threat in the main building of the leading media group. The explosion does not take place, but the group has suffered great losses as a result of the downtime and the management has demanded investigation of the matter.
- Six youth criminals are chosen to participate in a social experiment, named "Guesthouse Objectivity" (Pensionatet Sakligheten), where they are assigned to live together in an apartment while being supervised by two forgiving social workers.
- It was the most spectacular hostage situation and at the same time one of the most sensational crimes in German criminal history: the Gladbeck hostage drama kept Germany in suspense from August 16-18, 1988. 54 hours of fear.
- Gus, a scientist interested in curing generational alienation by touch, subjects Santos and Burgundy to a clandestine experiment, connecting them to machines that transport them to a mental world where they meet, discover and be reborn together.
- On June 6, 2006 C.E. the Church of Satan celebrated the 40th Anniversary at the Steve Allen Theatre in Los Angeles. The first Satanic High Mass was performed, inspired by the rituals of our founder, Anton Szandor LaVey.
- "69 Things You Want To Know About Sex" - We all know that there are things we want to know about sex but never asked about. Sometimes it is so tantalizing that we hardly dare to think the thought. It can be about events, peculiarities, phenomena, pleasures or pure facts. In 69 things we want to know about sex, we take the viewers to a captivating, entertaining and tickling journey around the world in search of answers to the questions we dare not ask.
- A scientist with an interest in genetics impregnates a sex worker with the seed of a hanged murderer. The sex worker gives birth to a child who has no concept of love, whom the scientist adopts.
- By 1964, Warhol had established himself as a famous pop artist and his creative ambitions were exploding in new directions in a creative frenzy of art, films - and even music. This is a day in his life.
- Before blues singer and guitarist "King" George Clemons moved to Sweden, for what was supposed to be three months, he lived in New York. While trying to make it in the music business he almost got caught up in the street life.
- A black radical's ex-wife and children establish a new family unit with a Caucasian man, but he eventually returns to violently besiege them inside their home.
- The Hawaiian Princess Laone's love for Keith Parrish is thwarted by social pressure. After being persuaded to refuse Mr. Parrish's proposal, she attempts suicide.
- The predicament of a woman who claims she is pregnant when she isn't. What started out as a mistake becomes a pretence that has to be carried through, with marriage and family relationships depending on the charade. She finds a solution that produces extraordinary consequences.
- An interview with the British neurologist Oliver Sacks. One of his most famous books is Awakenings (1973) about people that suffer from the economo disease, a sleeping disorder.
- An Algerian actor, a Honduran journalist, a Liberian writer, a Cameroonian performer: four remarkable journeys to Spain. No two journeys of migration are the same. In this film, we follow four people who left their native countries, each for different reasons, to build new lives in Spain. Mae Azango is a journalist who fled Liberia in 2006 but eventually returned home six years later. A teenager in the Liberian Civil War of the 1990s, she was eight months pregnant when her father was beaten to death. In 2016, journalist Milthon Robles fled his native Honduras where dozens of reporters have been killed covering the widespread gang violence. "They kidnapped me and tried to kill me several times," he says, "specifically for my work as an investigative journalist."
- A short story of a young runaway who makes a reverent visit to the Jack Kerouac Festival in Lowell, Massachusetts and gets more exposure to the counterculture than she expected. Part of series of shorts by Chuck Workman called "The Glory and the Dream."
- In remotest Siberia a man claiming to be the Son of God - the reincarnation of Jesus Christ - has gathered thousands of followers around him.
- About Edward Bulwer-Lytton, an English novelist, poet, playwright, and politician who wrote a stream of bestselling novels. Among them "Vril - The Coming Race" published in 1871.
- A brilliant surgeon who is unjustly condemned to 10 years imprisonment.
- "The Human Being" Judith is a doctor by conviction. She wants to become a cardiologist and completes part of her specialist training in the chronically understaffed emergency room of a hospital.
- Alan Kennebeck, a Milwaukee bank official, arrives in Stockholm to verify a loan to a factory official. At the same time, Mr Kennebeck, who is married, drifts into a tender affair with the official's sister-in-law Anita.
- 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.
- Lee at the piano singing a fragment of a blues when a young man enters her home with a pile of records: - Hello Miss Morse. I've brought over those records you just made for us. Oh, they're great. We'll be able to make the movie next week. Lee replies: I don't think so.