• Brando Lee – Don’t Look at the Demon (2022)

    2021-2030Brando LeeHorrorMalaysia

    A team of paranormal investigators head for the highlands of Fraser’s Hill, Malaysia, to probe a series of alleged disturbances at a house with a dark past.Read More »

  • Michael Simpson – Play for Today: Scully’s New Year’s Eve (1978)

    1971-1980ComedyDramaMichael SimpsonThe Wednesday Play & Play for TodayUnited Kingdom

    The first TV glimpse of Alan Bleasdale’s alienated, down-at-heel scouse youth Franny Scully, as he invites his mates to gatecrash his mum’s new year’s eve party, which Bleasdale had developed in stories for Radio Merseyside. Scully and mate Mooey made strange dramatised cameos on misfiring waterbound Saturday morning miscellany The Mersey Pirate, before graduating to a series for Granada television.Read More »

  • Peter Weir – Incredible Floridas (1972)

    1971-1980AustraliaDocumentaryPeter WeirShort Film

    This short film documents Australian composer Richard Meale’s homage to the young French poet, Arthur Rimbaud. Meale composed a music piece for woodwind, percussion and strings which he titled “Incredible Floridas”. This music is based on the poetry of the Frenchman, which many may find a little obscure.Read More »

  • Jack Gold – Play for Today: A Walk in the Forest (1980)

    Drama1971-1980Jack GoldThe Wednesday Play & Play for TodayTVUnited Kingdom

    ‘These refuseniks have all been denied visas to go to Israel. Some are in prison, others are suffering KGB harassment even as I speak… the point of asking you here is to find ways of mounting a barrage of publicity in the media. To act as horseflies, if you like, on the Kremlin’s rump.’Read More »

  • Tomu Uchida – Dotanba AKA The Eleventh Hour (1957)

    1951-1960AsianClassicsJapanTomu Uchida

    Quote:
    Based on a 1956 television feature on Japan’s national network, NHK, this is one of Uchida’s rarest films. A socially conscious drama with a contemporary backdrop, Dotanba focuses on the attempts to rescue a group of trapped miners. The title is a figure of speech — (essentially “last minute” or “eleventh hour”) — that refers to a situation of peril. The film boasts a script co-written by Uchida and Akira Kurosawa’s frequent screenwriter, Shinobu Hashimoto, and stars Kurosawa’s frequent star Takashi Shimura.Read More »

  • Various – Diamant 804 (1981)

    1981-1990EroticaGermanyVarious

    A classic german loop collection. Starring Jette Koplev.

    1. Gaby’s Liebesspiele.
    2. Make love not war.Read More »

  • Zako Heskiya – Yo ho ho (1981)

    1981-1990AdventureBulgariaDramaZako Heskiya

    A young actor with his backbone broken (he is crippled after a bad fall on the stage) is being treated in a hospital. He is invalidated for good and he wills not to live further on. He gets acquainted with a 10-year-old boy, Leonid, from the adjoining room. The boy is spending time in hospital with an arm in a plastic cast. They make friends. In fact, the actor intends to use the kid to provide him with poison. He starts telling a marvelous fairy tale. “Yo-ho-ho” – this old refrain of a pirate song is all too familiar. For the sake of the boy the Actor invents stories about the good buccaneer who is fighting the evil ruler Alvarez who must be punished for his crimes. Little by little the real people in hospital are transformed into the imaginary heroes of the pirate stories that the Actor and the child vanquished by goodness, honesty and self-denial. The boy is fascinated. Gradually, this pre-planned friendship develops into sincere devotion and affection. Leonid’s attachment to his older friend, and his trustfulness and good heart make the Actor abandon his plan of suicide and restore his faith in life. He realizes that life is worth living it, even if paralyzed.Read More »

  • Jacob Grønlykke – Qaamarngup uummataa AKA Heart of Light (1998)

    1991-2000ArthouseDramaGreenlandJacob Grønlykke

    Jacob Gronlykke directed this $3 million Danish drama, the first production filmed completely in Greenland, with Inuit dialogue. The story begins with the 1947 ceremonies in which Greenland becomes part of Denmark; Danish king Christian X gives a ceremonial rifle to Greenland’s Niisi Lynge. A half-century later, Niisi’s son Rasmus (Rasmus Lyberth) still has the rifle, but past dreams have gone sour. The alcoholic Rasmus, married to aggressive Marie (Vivi Nielsen), has many problems because of his drinking, and so does his son Niisi (Knud Peterson), who drunkenly kills his brother’s girlfriend and then commits suicide. The grief-stricken Rasmus sets out across the frozen land on a risky hunting trip, and the film’s tone shifts from realism to satire as Danish female environmentalists make fun of his crude clothing and gear. A helicopter pilot lands and tries to talk Rasmus into turning back. In a folkloric vein, Rasmus encounters a hermit, the Qivittoq (Anda Kristiansen), who takes him into a mystical world for a reunion with his father. Shown at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival.Read More »

  • Joris Ivens & Marceline Loridan Ivens – Une histoire de ballon (1976)

    1971-1980ArthouseDocumentaryFranceJoris IvensMarceline Loridan Ivens

    Eigth part: HISTOIRE D’UN BALLON: LE LYCEE NO. 31 A PEKIN (The Football Incident):
    A report on an ideological debate between a teacher and a pupil regarding an incident with a football.Read More »

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