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- Female artists, writers, photographers, designers, and adventurers are settled in Paris between the wars.
- Short film shown incorporating 4 separate frames simultaneously about a gay man who reminisces about his deceased lover, Frank.
- A performance of body painting by artist Yayoi Kusama with the collaboration of Akiko Iimura. A companion film to Flowers' Orgy (1968). A musical score by Tomomi Adachi was added to the film in 2007.
- From the exit of the Lumière ' s factory in Lyon the workers come out in two diagonals to the left and to the right.
- Super-8 single frame portrait of the Notre Dame cathedral featuring luminous light and a dense score incorporating players from the square.
- Feature-length compilation program presenting 37 out of 41 original fluxfilms produced and directed in the 1960s by Fluxus artists, including George Maciunas, Nam June Paik, Yoko Ono, Robert Watts, Paul Sharits, et al.
- An intriguing, well-chosen collage of compelling moments from noir cinema, skillfully attuned to the social fantastic and the oneiric quality of the films. -- James Naremore, author of More Than Night: Film Noir in Its Contexts.
- Center of this story is a clapper and his clapper board. A symphony of clapping.
- Inspired by Christian mythology, from which it draws a creative transformation force, in a search for identity that questions the two cultures to which the filmmaker belonged.
- When a writer investigates Austria through the images presented by postcards, the landscapes around Erzberg and Salzburg become something between a dream and a nightmare.
- A pyramid, by no means static, is instead brought to ever-increasing movement by the use of camera motion, cuts and fades. The cinematic illusion jumbles the individual elements and unites them in a symbolic sketch of Adolf Loos' dynamic thought processes. A High Speed Journey through the spinal cord of this revolutionary architect.
- A humorous PSA made to entertain (esp. young) people and remind them to protect themselves against AIDS.
- Dies Irae is a bad trip that replicates the dissolution of the self/government/family/body within the solvent of a white supremacist hyperreal suspension. In the movie's narrative track, M. Woods (the manufacturer of these Disassociative Productions) attempts to enter The Numb Spiral through the "Great Incision of Oxoniae." He portrays a white father lulled into the digital sickness to be with Wes, his doppelgänger. After entering a portal in a sex webcam site, he becomes Jaldaboath, the demiurge, recklessly seeking completion of the Self through attempts at contacting The Numb Spiral. Meanwhile, Joshua enters The Numb Spiral through 9DVR, a game platform installed at Culver City's Westfield Shopping Center in Los Angeles. The White Father haunts Joshua until Joshua decides to burn down the White Father's house in righteous anger. In the movie's "Bad Trip" track, a Vast Active Living Intelligence System communicates through the solubility of analog and digital medias. Some of these images, which proliferate the Numb Spiral, are referred to as the HOROS System. This system forms the visual underpinning of the Solis Codex, the accompanying extended text that explicates M. Woods' relationship to The Numb Spiral.
- Reality has countless layers, many of these will remain invisible to the untrained eye. In this elegy humans appear like ants, walking around their habitat in a preprogrammed way, while animals and plants act like individuals. This upside-down world has a strange attraction which is at once alienating and deeply familiar.
- Shot over the course of 10 years on an expired Svema, this film is about a mental trauma of a woman, who grew up in a dysfunctional family during Soviet times in Ukraine.
- Sometimes reduced to the image of a cursed artist, Amedeo Modigliani, an admirer of the masters of the Italian Renaissance, has traced an unparalleled path in modern art.
- A 9-year-old girl approaches self-awareness in a hauntingly dreamlike frolic in the great outdoors.
- Excerpts from gay porn films discarded by Boston X rated bookstores are combined with scenes from biblical epics and accompanied by Gregorian chant, played backwards.
- A microscopic view of liquid crystals morphing into various shapes.
- Freeze frame: the most absurd technique since the invention of the moving image. Through an elaborate process of duplicating the same image over and over again, it creates the illusion of stillness.
- A masked man sits in a dimly lit attic and is violently coughing and choking up blood. There is no period of rest, nor is there any indication that the subject's condition will ameliorate: the coughing is consistent, methodical, and tragic.
- Behind the door of an unfurnished apartment, a woman is desperately crawling, aimlessly, on the wooden floor of a bare room.
- Sandra Davis' short film is an ode to a "reverence of moment and passion of place."
- A graffiti style mystic montage of male flesh in action, juxtaposed with images of stained glass and religious icons, and accompanied by sacred music.
- A brief tribute to those that have haunted a moment of film history, stars of yesterday: Garbo, Del Rio, Crawford, Marlene Dietrich, Lupe Velez, Sylvia Sydney, Louise Rainer, etc..