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
1-50 of 151
- A man finds himself haunted by a mysterious black tower that appears to follow him wherever he goes.
- The destruction of a home for the building of a road is captured and contrasted with quotations from the residents.
- Bunny girl struggles with the anarchic hare.
- An experimental short and the audiences reaction is recorded and shown, then recorded while being show, and so on through multiple viewings.
- The Wanderer is the story of Gregor Samsa, a fumbling, scruffy hero, who flees his parents' African hairdresser with his lover Betty. But tragedy, confusion and a motley set of characters await. Adapted from a translation of Franz Kafka's Metamorphosis, by artist Rory Macbeth (who doesn't read German), this lurid, sticky and mischievous plot shadows Gregor and Betty as they fall in and out of love.
- A short film which combines magazine pictures and text in the form of word association game.
- Herzog-influenced imagining of ecological possibilities for four locations, anticipating Earth's impending post-societal collapse.
- An authoritative biography of the charismatic filmmaker, poet and anthropologist features excerpts from her pioneering Meshes of the Afternoon and her unfinished documentary on Haiti, interviews with Stan Brakhage and Jonas Mekas, and recordings of her lectures.
- A man uses different words to describe an amphibian as the film evolves.
- A short film about haircuts and clothes.
- This film applies the six principles for composition as in "Opinions on Painting by the Monk of the Green Pumpkin," written by the 18th-century Chinese painter Shih-T'ao as referenced in Raúl Ruíz's essay "For a Shamanic Cinema."
- With music by The Cardboards, The Shakes, Hans Brinker and The Dykes. By combining semi-fictionalized and documentary material, this film is as definitive a record of the Pittsburgh punk scene during its nascent underground as anyone could hope for. Beroes' band footage is radical departure from the gimmickry of stereotyped rock band documentary in its use of pans and slow dollys, capturing small glimpses of the musicians at work that a 'PR' film would have avoided at all costs. The cinematography demands a reconsideration of the rock band documentary's hoary technical vocabulary. From the time this film was made changes have already taken place in Pittsburgh punk-dom as the bands have moved from an insular salon society to more 'legitimate' venues. Some say things are better than ever, others mourn the passing of Pittsburgh punk's innocence. Beroes in Debt Begins at 20 has produced not only entertainment, but also a small and very precious time capsule.
- Multiple-exposed and treated images of Piccadilly Circus mirror each other or travel across the two screens, to pop-art effect.
- The film begins with a pair of female hands stroking the back of a man wearing a white jumper. A second shot reveals the woman's bare bottom being caressed by the man's hands. The man is Omar Blondin Diop, briefly in London to participate in Jean-Luc Godard's Sympathy for the Devil alongside Frankie Dymon and members of the British Black Panthers. During this period, Diop also associated with LFMC figures such as Simon Hartog and David Larcher and wrote a text on Andy Warhol for the Co-op's journal Cinim.
- Moderation, set in Egypt, Greece and Italy, revolves around a female horror director (Maya Lubinsky) and a screenwriter (Anna De Filippi), whose latest collaboration is haunted by encounters with its 'raw material' and the escalation of conflicting desires. Faced with the disintegration of their project, the director becomes more and more drawn into conversations with the actors she has cast (Aida El Kashef, Michele Valley and Giovanni Lombardo Radice), which reflect on the way horror traverses the affective and material realities of their lives on and off screen.
- This experimental short subject is centered on the point of view of a woman in contemplating the nature of time, of memory, and of her personal relationships.
- This movie is an experimental documentary following the flow of the Thames out of London to the sea. It has a narration from John Hurt that takes the form of reading old manuscripts, books and news articles, and also a posthumous narration from poet TS Eliot reading from his own work, The Dry Salvages from the Four Quartets. Engravings, paintings, and archival film are juxtaposed against the contemporary footage, including Pieter Breughel the Elder's "The Triumph of Death" (c.1562) from the Prado Museum.
- Sardonic reflections on the state of the world occasioned by a frozen news broadcast.
- Peter Gidal's second Coda continues with William Burroughs voice, reading three lines of a 1971 story by Gidal.
- Film performance, made of sections of loop-film, of the ever-evolving piece 'Circle and Square 1966-2003' by avant-garde filmmaker Takahiko Iimura, performed at LUX London, on October 13, 2003.
- A satirical exploration of the origins of humor that moves between the absurd and the deadly serious.
- A patriotic rendering of all the verses of 'God Save the Queen' with some Victorian lantern slides.
- Peter Gidal's structuralist short CODA I is composed of three lines of a thousand-word story he wrote (as read by William Bouroughs in a cutup tape collage) amidst an ultra-abstract play-of-light through a camera. Gidal describes his "socalled" imagery as "a complex of barely visible cuts in space and time, the opposite of erasure, but nothing so much as visible." - Stela Jelincic
- Discover the fantastic world of Lopaka, a boy who lives on a tropical island near his best friend Flipper, a dolphin! Flipper teaches Lopaka how to live underwater, and together they explore the sunken city of Quetzo that is ruled by an evil giant octopus named Dexter. While they try to avoid any run-ins with Dexter's strongmen -- Fin, Nip, and Bubbles, sharks who are better at bumbling than bullying -- Flipper and Lopaka share many extraordinary adventures above and below the waves. Join them as they battle an ancient volcano, befriend a huge sea serpent, and save the villagers from sawtooth sharks! There are boatloads of fun, friendship, and adventure in this awesome animated collection from the hit series!