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1-50 of 168
- A hypnotherapist is caught up in the pursuit of a serial killer.
- Hamlet (Tony Meyer) suspects his uncle, King Claudius (Barry Stanton) has murdered his father to claim the throne of Denmark and the hand of Hamlet's mother, Gertrude (Dame Helen Mirren), but the Prince cannot decide whether or not he should take vengeance.
- The film concerns an elderly couple played by Rosamund Greenwood and Roy Evans, who we later discover to be brother and sister, who accidentally run over and kill a young cyclist played by David Pugh on a lonely northern moor - but instead of reporting the incident to the police the woman decides to take the corpse home with them. There she dresses him in the clothes of a second brother, killed in the Second World War, shows him her photo-albums, and tries to engage him in conversation. Her brother, meanwhile, gathers wood to build a coffin. Greenwood has the only speaking part in the movie and largely carries it; she gives a subtle, heart-rending performance as a sister clinging to her past. Memories of the War hang heavily over the house - quite literally in the form of an aircraft propeller suspended from the ceiling that the woman booby-traps in order to prevent her brother burying the corpse.
- A woman's life has been turned upside down ever since she noticed those strange floating strings in her sight.
- A short film in which a director's voice appears to be directing all the action on a busy London street.
- Nestor, a man with several obsessive-compulsive behaviours, lives in an unstable houseboat that never stops oscillating.
- A misguided orphan struggles to find a place for himself.
- An experimental approach towards gas attacks and war trauma
- Moments of lost self-control.
- Four grown wolves and a little one chase a sheep through the night. Little Wolf stops, captivated by the moon. He catches hold of it, and then the moon rises, with Little Wolf hanging on. The other wolves see him hanging there and try to rescue him, but their attempts are confounded by the playful sheep. As day breaks, the moon sets and Little Wolf comes close enough to earth to jump to terra firma. A celebration ensues.
- An investigative and exploratory hands--on gloves-off study into the practice of putting things 'off'. Sometimes the only way to get something done is to do two dozen other things first.
- A young boy and his father live in a dull, lonely house with the shadow of mourning hanging over them both. The boy misses his mother but gets no comfort from his father's ascertains that she went peacefully. This tragedy is added to by the family dog which is looking increasingly unhealthy.
- 'All You Can Eat' deals with the topic of the meat industry in the 21st century. Instead of animals, cartoon characters are being used as products of the modern society and the way it is being constructed. A tribe of cartoons are being taken by force from their natural habitat, only to fulfill the voracious intentions of humans.
- A short film which combines magazine pictures and text in the form of word association game.
- An unidentified walker is lured through the woods by the distant sound of a saxophone. He is drawn past inviting groups of men, a woman picnicking, and a boy eating an apple.
- Although Mermaids have been traditional symbols of fertility and a sexuality so powerful as to be a danger to shipping, details of their reproductive processes have been scarce. The film reveals the cycle of laying, fertilising and hatching as well as the previously secret role of storm-wrecked sailors.
- Dramatised documentary tracing the history of childbirth practices from the earliest times to the present day.
- An intimate and insightful documentary unravelling the state of mind of the director's late alcoholic father through the poems he left behind.
- A voyeuristic window overlooking the experience of a kid dealing with his first sexual feelings.
- Women read biographical accounts of the lives, thoughts and aspirations of a prostitute and are, apparently, interviewed about similar subject matter.
- The British science fiction writer J.G. BALLARD talks about his life and work. Meanwhile a crashed pilot stalks the landscapes of his dreams. The film is concerned with what constitutes an adequate picture of a person, the role of the imagination in transforming the world.
- The essential focus of this work is about a peculiar contemporary Japanese funeral ritual. As in many countries, a person's death isn't always just the concern of the immediate family. Totally unrelated people such as, funeral directors and photoshop editors are involved. We are all aware that we will die one day, however we can't actually experience what happens to us after we die.
- Alternating Super-8, digital footage and the correspondence with her brother, the filmmaker evokes their deceased mother and the Portuguese revolution, which she only gets to know through these diffracted memories.
- A woman struggles with her grey hound, her partner struggles to understand.
- Albert Speer, Hitler's Architect and War Minister is sent to Spandau prison for 20 years.
- One dark night. Two separate sexual encounters. A gothic-noir journey through sexual perversion and corruption.
- Once heart burning memories wither along time; for the beloved, it's as insignificant as non-existence.
- Three teens face their inner wildness on a dreamlike journey when they decide to peek under the hair of God.
- She dives into the past looking for a Revolution for the present.
- A allegorical tale about how Society discards and segregates people who are different and treats them as a lesser form of humans and as if all were the same.
- Alex tries to understand his brother Jamie, who has Down syndrome and several learning disabilities. Despite being close to nonverbal, he demonstrates a lot of charisma, a sharp sense of humor, and emotional sensitivity.
- A flower. A boy. A long way to go. The only way to get anywhere. The flower has not yet bloom, but the boy found his own unique path.