• Raoul Ruiz – La noche de enfrente AKA Night Across the Street (2012)

    2011-2020ArthouseChileRaoul Ruiz

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Quote:
    On the verge of a forced retirement, Don Celso, an elderly office worker begins to relive both real and imagined memories from his life – a trip to the movies as a young boy with Beethoven, listening to tall tales from Long John Silver, a brief stay in a haunted hotel. Stories hide within stories and the thin line between imagination and reality steadily erodes, opening up a marvelous new world of personal remembrance and fantastic melodrama. A playfully elegiac film from the great Raul Ruiz, conceived to be seen only after his death, Night Across the Street is a beautiful final masterwork exploring the director’s favorite subjects: fiction, history and life itself.Read More »

  • Basil Dean – The Constant Nymph (1933)

    1931-1940Basil DeanDramaUnited Kingdom

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    A married man leaves his wife for a teenage girl.

    The Constant Nymph is a 1933 British drama film directed by Basil Dean and Victoria Hopper, Brian Aherne and Leonora Corbett. It is an adaptation of the novel The Constant Nymph by Margaret Kennedy. Dean tried to persuade Novello to reprise his appearance from the 1928 silent version The Constant Nymph but was turned down and cast Aherne in the part instead.
    Read More »

  • Andy Hurst – You’re Dead… (1999)

    1991-2000Andy HurstComedyCrimeUnited Kingdom

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    A veteran bank robber and his sidekicks plan a heist that goes awry.Read More »

  • Richard Myers – Wood Assemblage (1962)

    1961-1970ExperimentalRichard MyersUSA

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    A children’s art project done at the Norton, Ohio Elementary Schools in 1962. Using scrap wood the 4th, 5th, and 6th graders plan and make wooden sculptures that have a primitive totem-like quality. Professors James M. Someroski, and Marlene Mancini Frost of Kent State University assisted in the making of the film. Professor Fred Coulter composed and played the music.Read More »

  • Ronnie Cramer – Even Hitler Had a Girlfriend (1992)

    1991-2000CampExploitationRonnie CramerUSA

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    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    A lonely security guard can’t even get a decent blind date, so he begins peeping at women through their bedroom windows. Before long he’s paying call girls to come over and secretly videotaping every session.
    Within two weeks he’s blown his life savings and been subjected to a lot of verbal and physical abuse. This bizarre black comedy is loaded with naked women!

    Starring Andren Scott – with Monica McFarland, Karen Pombo, Becky Van Lewen and Sheila Traister. Directed by Ronnie Cramer, music by Alarming Trends.

    “The Best Drive-in Movie of 1992…” Joe Bob BriggsRead More »

  • Masaru Konuma – Sei to ai no korîda aka In the Realm of Sex (1977)

    1971-1980ComedyEroticaJapanMasaru Konuma

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    Plot/ Synopsis

    In th e Realm of Sex is a 1977 Roman Porno film directed by Masaru Konuma and starring Natsuko Yashiro and Asami Ogawa. It is a comedy satirizing the Roman Porno genre, and the Office Lady Journal series in particular. Naomi Tani and Yuko Katagiri appear as themselves in the film, making fun of their on-screen personas.Read More »

  • Juan Luis Buñuel & Claude Chabrol – Fantômas (1980)

    1971-1980Claude ChabrolFranceJuan Luis BuñuelJuan Luis Buñuel and Claude ChabrolThrillerTV

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    Quote:
    This miniseries based on the Fantomas novels of Marcel Allain and Pierre Souvestre, takes the Fantomas character back to his sinister roots. After the comedic Andre Hunabelle films of the 60s, filmmakers Claude Charbrol and Juan Bunuel went back to the original books for their inspiration. The results are magnificent. The series is a reinvestigation of the pulp roots of the character, while infusing the surreal, dreamlike qualities that the original texts inspired in the works of Juan Gris, Rene Magritte and Luis Bunuel (who is referenced, along with Apollinaire, in the first episode.)Read More »

  • Kana Matsumoto – Mazâ wôtâ aka Mother Water (2010)

    2001-2010ArthouseDramaJapanKana Matsumoto

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    Blessed with several large rivers, interconnected streams and springs, Japan’s ancient capital, Kyoto, anoints the land with a bountiful source of water. In this tranquil setting, three women join the flow of a small community with the subtle presence of a spring breeze. Setsuko , the proprietor of a whiskey-only bar; Takako, the owner of a coffee shop along the waterway; Hatsumi, a maker of tofu so delicious it seems to spring forth from the clear water. Under their subtle influence, other townspeople gradually begin their own streams too: Yamanoha, a local worker for a furniture workshop; Otome, the owner of a neighborhood public bath; Jin, a young man who assists him at the bath; Makoto, a wayfarer about the town. Among their daily lives, there is Poplar, a small child with a perpetually friendly smile.Read More »

  • Jean-Luc Godard – Week End AKA Weekend [+Extras] (1967)

    1961-1970Amos Vogel: Film as a Subversive ArtArthouseComedyFranceJean-Luc Godard

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    SYNOPSIS
    The master of the French New Wave indicts consumerism and elaborates on his personal vision of Hell with this raucous, biting satire. A nasty, scheming bourgeois Parisian couple embarks on a journey through the countryside to her father’s house, where they pray for his death and a subsequent inheritance. Their trip is at first delayed, and later it is distracted by several outrageous events and characters including an apocalyptic traffic jam, a group of fictional philosophers, a couple of violent carjackers, and eventually, a gross display of cannibalism. By the time the film concludes, their seemingly simple journey has deteriorated into a freewheeling philosophical diatribe that leaves no topic unscathed. With Week End, Jean-Luc Godard reaches an impressive plateau of film originality, incorporating inter-titles, extended tracking shots, and music to add an entirely new grammar to film language. The result is a deeply challenging work that will most certainly invigorate some viewers just as much as it will as frustrate others. Standout highlights include a jarring, sexually graphic opening monologue shot with a roaming camera and blaring musical accompaniment, and the infamous traffic jam scene, where an endless parade of cars sit bumper to bumper amidst burning cars, picnics, and honking horns. The work of a true artist and pioneer, Godard’s Week End is a landmark film that hasn’t aged or lessened in impact over time.
    (Taken from Rotten Tomatoes)Read More »

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