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1-8 of 8
- A documentary on the rise and stumble of Troy Duffy, the bartender-cum-filmmaker who was swept up by Miramax's Harvey Weinstein to turn his script for The Boondock Saints into a feature film.
- A light-hearted look at the life and career of porn star Ron Jeremy, from his devoted fanbase to his unlikely status as a sex symbol and his goal to achieve mainstream success.
- Off The Boulevard is a story of art and heart; and the struggle it takes to believe in your dreams. It is an entertaining and informative Documentary Feature about seven artists: two Musicians, two Filmmakers, two Actors, and one Comedian, whose friendships are created by struggle and perseverance. Their journey will inspire and educate all those who follow their own path.
- Looking for Lenny is an in-depth, controversial documentary that uses Lenny Bruce's legacy to explore the present condition of the fear of words and expression.
- A documentary following the exploits of a group of filmmakers as they take their independent feature, Ten 'til Noon (2006), along the film festival circuit, and the politics, pitfalls, triumphs and comic tragedies they encounter along the way. Full of interviews with important players in the indie world, this is a must see for young filmmakers on what happens when the shooting stops.
- After 125 years of Hollywood telling you what you were going to watch, where you would watch it and when, online and social media has forced the studio system to turn the conversation around. In short, the Web is nothing short of the tool that democratized Hollywood... for better and for worse. EVERYTHING DOESN'T SUCK tells that story, from the people who have been on the front lines. Studio heads who laughed at the Internet, at their own peril; critics who found themselves out of a job because some kid who thinks cinema began with STAR WARS was doing it for free; fans who tore down Burbank's version of the Berlin Wall with nothing but mouse clicks. A lot can happen in 15 years. Now that the genie is out of the bottle, what's next? Will the studio system "figure it out," and be able to bring that control back, or will your taste in cinema be shaped by the 21st Century equivalent of Wayne and Garth in the basement? Or will we find the digital version of Charlie Chaplin's United Artists just around the corner?
- Where It Was Made is a web series that takes you on a trip to the filming locations of classic movies and shows you how they look today. Along the way, we also provide trivia, interviews with the cast and crew, and other fun things.