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1-15 of 15
- A federal agent uncovers lucrative toxic waste dumps in Appalachia and must deal with the locals who want to keep their 'gold mine' secret.
- Truman, a Chicago cop, sets out to find the killer of his brother. Meanwhile, another of his brothers, Briar (a hillbilly) decides to find the killer himself.
- The story of a prank gone horribly wrong. A group of college students, led by "The Circuit Maker", a Svengali-like professor, make prank calls to funeral homes. After intently researching the obituaries, they try and convince whoever answers the call that they are the deceased calling from the great beyond. As the prank gets larger than life, gaining national attention, they attempt the biggest prank ever: they will 'Hell-ephone' the funeral of a recently executed serial killer, known as "The Sea-Monster". When the Sea-Monster's mother drops dead after taking the call, the kids start showing up dead. Mike Stone, the leading detective on the Sea-Monster case, is convinced that the Sea-Monster has returned from the grave to avenge his mother's death. The rest of the police force, however, doesn't buy that theory. Now cavorting with the ultimate evil on the other side; has the Sea-Monster been given to power to come back and continue the reign of terror that was interrupted for ten years while he sat on Death Row?
- VeeJay, Vernon Ray Hicks, is a one fanged backwoods hillbilly vampire. With best friend Zed and cousin Sissy they catch snakes for the Pentecostals. Sissy is a lush, Big Mama owns the local bar. He has to deal with yankee vampires, bigots, pill pushers, coon hunters, vampire hunters, witch Glenda, Hell and a Gamw Warden.
- The poignant songs of church-goers, miners, and farmers of eastern Kentucky express the joys and sorrows of life among the rural poor.
- An inside look at the lives of women who fry chicken, make pizzas, and flip burgers at four fast food restaurants in eastern Kentucky. Documents the low wage, no benefits jobs in America's service economy.
- Lee and Opal Sexton live in the mountains of Eastern Kentucky, farming the land where Lee was raised. Lee is a retired coal miner and revered banjo legend, a living link to the deep past of American music. Though now well into his eighties and hampered by age, Lee continues to perform and teach his distinctive 2-finger banjo style to a new generation eager to preserve a vanishing cultural tradition. Linefork offers an immersive view of Lee and Opal's daily rituals and inherent resilience while documenting the raw yet delicate music of a singular musician, linked to the past yet immediately present.
- An intimate look inside the small town of Beattyville, located deep in the heart of America's Appalachian mountains.
- The viewer of this interactive movie has an opportunity to take on the roles of three very different teens: Leslie is a model student that wants to stay focused on her own goals; Roy who doesn't care about school and hasn't gone much since the tenth grade; and Ryan, a promising basketball star, dating the prettiest girl in school. The viewer must make important choices that could alter each character's future. These choices have the power to win respect, knowledge, satisfaction and the foundation for a good life or lose almost everything. What happens to each of the teens is up to the viewer and the choices that are made. As the player makes choices the movie branches off, playing out what might happen in real life as a result of those choices. A ground breaking interactive movie revealing the significant problems of prescription drug abuse.
- Things get under way with "The Haunted House," a dark tale of a murderous suitor with a penchant for killing pretty young girls. The second story details the frightening events that unfold when a young innocent named Sarah ventures into the bone yard to recover a walking stick. Caught under the spell of a creature too horrible for words, she is helpless to resist its diabolical charms. The third story, entitled "Little Billy's Bones," finds the son of a woodcutter falling prey to his murderous new stepmother, and things wind to a close in "White Wolf," in which a small town butcher makes a mint ridding the streets of wild wolves. When he reaches 500 kills and retires with money to spare, he finds himself faced with the prospect of hunting one last wolf.