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- SUMMER'S CHILDREN is the story of a young man who tries to escape his troubled home and sister to find a new life for himself. He takes on a new job and enters into new relationships, but his sister pursues him in a cat and mouse game, getting into trouble in the city's seedy underground. In a series of flashbacks, we discover the reasons for his initial departure, as he and his sister try to find a peaceful resolution to their feelings about each other.
- Nina, played by Emma Louise Saunders, suffers from Alzheimer's. In a private hospital in Chelsea, her husband, Sam, played by Christos Floros, sits by her side as she tests a new technology, the Memory Helmet that assists Nina to briefly recall some of her memories.
- Five strangers meet under the one circumstance. As they begin to know one another we are sent into the Past to understand how these five individuals became the people who they are in the Present. Soon we release the secret connection that they all have - even if they may not know it. A story about five lives that have been touched by love, tragedy, hatred, pain and friendship, Five Degrees tells the story of five people who have lived, lost everything and their journey to find it again.
- A love story spanning decades as two men not only fight the world for their love and it's changes surrounding them, but also one another while they battle the one thing that tears them apart and their determination to beat the illnesses which attempts to destroys them and plague their bodies. A story about how love conquers all, including death.
- Australia's first ever truly Independent Film about secrets, lies, love and the choice between an unconditional love or life.
- Through a series of sensitive charcoal sketches by celebrated artist John Gould and the dramatization and animation of these drawings by filmmaker Julius Kohanyi, the events of a market day in the Mexican village of Oaxaca come to life. As church bells clang its first lazy awakenings, we search the crooked streets leading to the old church, past peasants selling goods in the market square, to the exciting climax of the fiesta where "mariachi" bands compete to the singing and dancing of villagers under the umbrella of an elegant gazebo.
- A romantic-drama about a gay man, Justin Ambrose, who has been in a relationship for 10 years. Both he and his partner, Matt Survino, are tested positive with HIV. Soon after, Justin betrays Matt to purposefully infect another person; when Matt is confronted with this he has to choose if he will stay or go; even though Justin's own prerogative is to push Matt away and force him to leave. The situation becomes more complicated when the man whom Justin infected comes back into the picture.
- We get on board the SS Segwun and take a "look back" to the heyday of the 1920's and 30's when this 100-year old coal-burning steamship ferried the rich and famous from all over the world to their private residences on Millionaires Row in the Muskoka Lakes. Archival film footage from the McLaughlin Family allows us to relive a lavish summer wedding with its gracious gowns and silk top hats, the arrival of a vintage seaplane on a stopover to Baghdad, international competitions held between elegant mahogany speedboats from the United States and Canada, and more...a rare glimpse into a romantic era in history.
- A fantastic voyage into the microscopic world of crystals. Using a specially designed camera on a rotary field, the filmmaker captures changing colors, forms, and shapes in a kaleidoscope of dazzling images set to a polyphonic style of music. A crystal odyssey!
- Artists Workshop takes a look at one of the forerunners to the visual arts centers of today - where taxi drivers, doctors, dentists, factory workers, and children of all ages come together to express their unique personal visions in a variety of mediums - taught by some of the artists whose views on life drawing, dance, puppetry, and clay sculpture continue to influence the teaching of art today.
- RODIN, the genius, the artist, the romantic, speaks for himself and his art in this film that takes his life full circle from the age of 19 to his death at 77. The brilliance of his revolutionary creations is seen outdoors in natural settings and in museums around the world. Highlighted are the Burghers of Calais, The Thinker, The Kiss, and the Gates of Hell, amongst many others. Also discussed are his relationship with his wife, and his mistress and protégé Camille Claudel. To view this film is to experience Rodin's life, his spirit, and the mood of his work.
- The age-old story of Tevye and his seven daughters is brought to life again in this film merging art, literature, and music. The color engravings of celebrated artist Saul Field, the poetry and humor of storyteller Sholom Aleichem, and an original soundtrack of soaring Chassidic music, transport the viewer into a Russian village in the early 1900's.
- Henry Moore grants Julius Kohanyi a rare personal visit with the master himself, at the pinnacle of his career. In the intimate setting of his studio in England, as he mixes clay in a palette, Moore shows how he conceives and shapes ideas for his art. Sitting amongst the pieces of driftwood and artifacts which inspire him, he plays with an early, miniature model for his monumental masterpiece now standing in front of Lincoln Center, and discusses the influences which made him decide to be a sculptor. In addition to a rarely seen pink marble sculpture made for his wife, we tour his private sculpture garden and travel around the world to see his other works on display. Moore granted few filmmakers access to him, and this film is about allowing Moore, in his prime, to speak for himself.
- Visit the mind of a teenager.
- A timeless film about a contemporary man from the "cellophane-wrapped graveyard" of suburbia who seeks an alternative to shopping at a modern supermarket. He soon discovers The Herring Belt, an ethnic marketplace downtown and back in time, made up of German, Dutch, Italian, Jewish and Portuguese immigrants. One can relive with him the sights, sounds, smells, and traditions that have evolved into the melting pot we now know as America.
- The stories of four individuals and their various decisions are linked through an uncontrollable dynamic system, otherwise known as Chaos Theory.
- When 10-year old 'Teddy' rips his pants in an after school fight, it becomes a triggering mechanism for underlying real problems he must now deal with - alienation, fear of rejection by his family and friends, and poverty.
- A museum becomes more than stony faces and objects from the past, when a young boy sneaks in and accidentally stays behind after closing time. Using his imagination, he finds himself pursued by armies of miniature Chinese porcelain soldiers, armored English knights, dinosaurs, and Egyptian mummies, as the exhibits come alive before his eyes. In a rare, and impossible to film today, running sequence through the museum, the boy confronts his fears in a remarkable climax that will captivate young viewers and adults alike.
- Young French dreamer, Jean Tortu, has for ambition to send a tourist rocket to the moon. He arrives in London to pitch his idea to the boss of the Atlantis Travel Agency.
- In this experimental film using the works of painter Henri van Bentum, the strong and deliberate interplay of colors and movements illustrates some of the many variations possible using the artistic style of pointillism. H - A stands for Hydrogen Atom, the first building block of the universe. Through this film, color penetrates color, and their interaction reflects the birth of all living things.