Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-18 of 18
- Flash is a curmudgeon with a hankering for classic movies and booze. Cameron is a volatile teen who commits grand theft auto just because the car is an exact replica from Christine. Their relationship is forged in the darkness of a movie theater and fueled by a mutual appreciation of rebellion and cinema. Cameron enters a student film contest, though he lacks the resources of his peers. Learning that Flash is a retired Hollywood gaffer--and the only surviving crew member from Citizen Kane--Cameron follows him to his home at the Motion Picture Residence for the Elderly, a colony of aging film folk set aside by the industry. A quirky fellowship develops, in which Flash and his friends help Cameron make his film and, in doing so, change his life.
- A biographical "mockumentary" that offers a glimpse into the life and mind of master of the macabre, director Tim Burton. It features faked home movies of Burton's idiosyncratic childhood and tongue-in-cheek interviews. Originally premiered as an HBO special to promote the release of "Edward Scissorhands"
- An old man is dying. He wants to give his inheritance away, but all his family members are preventing him from deciding who should inherit his kingdom.
- A short horror film based on the Italian Giallo films of the 1970's. A young abusive house keeper and an elderly man in a rocking chair becoming involved in a series of mysterious murderous in an isolated mansion.
- A single mother grieving the loss of her only child does what the police have failed to do. She finds the hit and run driver responsible for her daughter's death and imprisons him in her home.
- A young house keeper of a elderly man in a rocking chair becomes involved in a murderous rampage in an isolated farm house. She will soon reveal the true secret of what is really happening.
- how do we as a society value our elderly citizens? and do we really see them?
- Vincent Byron is on trail for murder. Mina Taylor, his sweetheart, and ward of his father, John Byron, is seated beside him in the crowded court room. The district attorney has just called to the witness chair the second mate of the "Blue Star," a tramp steamer. The witness tells of the night he was doing watch, the night the murder was committed. From the bridge he saw one whom he believed to be Vincent Byron drag a man out from a stateroom across the deck and choke him. This fact established, Mina is called to the witness chair by the defense. She tells of her early childhood in the west, of her father's death, and of her going to live with her father's old friend, John Byron, on Long Island, New York. She tells what happened in her cabin on the night of the murder; that the deceased, Geoffrey Storm, intruded himself into her room and grossly insulted her. She saw two hands reach through the doorway and clutch the assailant around the neck. Then she fainted. At this point in the trial the defense calls to the stand Dr. Lambert, an eminent nerve specialist. Dr. Lambert testifies that he had been called into consultation on young Byron's case several years previous, that he had found his case hopeless; that it would have been an utter impossibility for the defendant to have committed the crime, in that he was unable to stand upon his feet. Vincent Byron asks and is give permission to tell his story. He is carried to the witness stand. He begins his story from the time that the girl in question first came to live with his father. He tells of the girl's appearance, her crudeness, and illiteracy; of the interest that he took in her, and of the many hours he devoted in teaching her both books and the ways of a gentlewoman. Under his guidance she grew to beautiful womanhood. There was his father's business partner, Geoffrey Storm, who had grossly snubbed Mina when she first came from the west, but when the girl grew beautiful. Storm began to covet her. Then came the trip to Europe in the hope of a cure for the prisoner. Storm had insisted on taking his father's place, his father having been detained at home on important business. The girl accompanied him (Vincent) to help care for him. Three days out. Storm's attention to the girl became intolerable; and Vincent was forced to look on helpless. Finally, the girl absolutely refused to receive attention, from Storm, and Storm, furious at it all, sought surcease in the ship buffet. Vincent, in his testimony, comes to that point where he killed Storm. He speaks of Storm's insult to him and of his forcing his way into Mina's cabin, a short distance from where the prisoner was seated in his wheelchair. "And I stood upon my two feet and killed him," That is the prisoner's defense, and in a moment, under the stress of reviewing the story, he again stands up before the judge and jury. Vincent Byron is acquitted. Dr. Lambert, interested in the oddness of the case, again undertakes to work a cure upon young Byron. What with the faith of both the girl and the young man, himself, combined with the skill of the scientist, the case turns out successful. Byron searches out Mina and takes her in his arms.
- Kellie's ex-husband Daryl comes to the Warsaw in a wheelchair with two broken legs, having fallen off her mom's roof doing free repairs. He returns her engagement ring as Drew starts having feelings for her. Drew tries to obstruct him.
- A disabled transfer student is befriended by, and included in, the study group. As time goes on, he takes advantage of the group's kindness/empathy. His mother, who, as a family friend of Kingsfield, attempts to gain preferential treatment for her son.
- 2018– 19mPodcast Episode
- 2020– 1h 15mPodcast Episode
- 2017– 1h 27mPodcast Episode