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1-17 of 17
- An abandoned wife is evicted from her house and starts a tragic conflict with her house's new owners.
- A small-time reporter tries to convince the police she saw a murder in the apartment across from hers.
- Joel, a caustic 1980s film critic for a national horror magazine, finds himself unwittingly trapped in a self-help group for serial killers. With no other choice, Joel attempts to blend in or risk becoming the next victim.
- Follows a chaotic, tender family that is on a road trip across a rugged landscape and fussing over the sick dog and getting on each others' nerves. Only the mysterious older brother is quiet.
- Settlers traveling through the Oregon desert in 1845 find themselves stranded in harsh conditions.
- "The company of wolves is better than that of man." Once upon a frenzied time, Woman meets Man. Woman dances with Man. Man kisses Woman. Man grips Woman. Woman escapes Man. Man chases Woman - nothing new. Or is there?
- Estela and her mother Clota must travel from Junín, where they live, to the town of Costa Bonita, in Necochea, to see some apartments that Estela's father left her.
- Charlotte Gainsbourg looks at her mother Jane Birkin in a way she never did, overcoming a sense of reserve. Using a camera lens, they expose themselves to each other, begin to step back, leaving space for a mother-daughter relationship.
- An homage to Italian director Sergio Corbucci of the 1960s and contemporary director Quentin Tarantino, recounting a memorable period in Italian cinema with the sensibility of today.
- 1989: a few weeks before the fall of the Berlin Wall, Pago, Rice and Bibi, three young men from Cesena, visit East-Europe in search of adventure. This journey will change their life forever
- A documentary about Roman Polanski, the man and filmmaker. Roman Polanski speaks about his eventful life story and career in conversation with Andrew Braunsberg, his former business partner, producer, and friend of many years.
- Many have challenged the studios. But none of them managed to win the battle. Not even Bette Davis, who was the Queen of Hollywood. And then, Olivia de Havilland came. After a first battle against Jack Warner to let her play the role of Melanie in Gone with the Wind, the actress will attack one of the biggest Hollywood machines: the Warner Studio. This episode will contribute greatly to the legend of the actress who started one of the most feminist process conducted so far in the film industry. Olivia de Havilland was the Hollywood Insoumise (insubordinate).
- Fellini behind the curtains, observing the great director through the eyes and the lenses of Ferruccio Castronuovo, Fellini's trusted partner, who filmed him between the '76 and '86.
- Boston, Massachusetts, 1920. Two Italians, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, were sentenced to death, the only crime they were guilty of was of being anarchists. The whole world stood up, the people crowded into the town squares, not just the lives of two men were at stake but also the beliefs which they represented. Millions of voices in many languages were raised in protest. They sought justice for Sacco and Vanzetti, but nothing could save their lives. In August 23th, 1927 Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were executed by electric chair, becoming martyrs and icons of freedom. Almost fifty years later, in 1971, the Italian director Giuliano Montaldo made a film about their unbelievable story. "Sacco e Vanzetti" immediately became a manifesto against intolerance, injustice and the death penalty. It was a huge international success. The soundtrack "Here's to you" by Ennio Morricone and Joan Baez became an anthem of freedom and the defense of human rights, raising awareness among young people all over the world. Because of the film, a Committee was created, and in 1977, Michael Dukakis, governor of Massachusetts, declared the rehabilitation of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti and their complete innocence to the world. Now, in 2017, 90 years after the execution, and 50 years after the rehabilitation, the Montaldo movie has been restored. DIRECTOR's NOTE The Legal Death celebrates the work of the great director Giuliano Montaldo who had the courage to realize a film about the story of Sacco and Vanzetti during the seventies, a time full of social upheavals. A time where the story of two Italian anarchists sent to death although they were complete innocents, was disappeared from collective memory. Montaldo shed light on this important story of tragedy, injustice and martyrdom, and he put it on the screen because he was trustful that it could arouse a generation who was back then starting to fight for civil rights and freedom. The opening in 1971 was a huge international success. The movie theaters were stormed of young people who saw the Sacco and Vanzetti's sacrifice as an emblem of important beliefs and ideals. The artwork was translated and released all over the world. The soundtrack composed by Ennio Morricone and Joan Baez became an anthem sang by the voice of millions of people from all the squares all over the world. The names of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti came from the past to testify their sacrifice for an higher level of thought. Silvia Giulietti and Giotto Barbieri wanted to unveil what was there, behind the scenes of a film which is now a milestone in the "so called"cinema socially active. In the documentary Montaldo tells about the genesis of the movie and also when he came up with the idea, how he found the right producer, why he chose those particular actors, his artistic approach. The creation of a masterpiece,and then the difficulties apparently intractables he had to deal with. All that allowed, even moments of real luck to get the the film in the theaters at last. The Legal Death is a wonderful journey throughout the cinema and like every journey, you know when it starts but you're not sure to come to an end. This is the magic of cinema...
- After fourty years of dictatorship, everything seemed possible.
- We all know some Palindromes like LEVEL or "No lemon, no melon". What we may not know is that there are fans who have made palindromes the passion of their lives. TO THE PALÍNDROME. is a unique documentary recorded in four countries and full of unforgettable characters. An anthropological journey of personal search, of loss and encounter, of humanism and empathy, of creation and, above all, of glorious uselessness. A trip as fun as suggestive.
- Fifty years have gone by since the golden age of Spaghetti Westerns, a unique film genre that re-imagined the American Far West. Today few remember the Balcázar Studios in Barcelona (Spain), one of the most productive of this genre for almost a decade. Except some survivors, those responsible for a type of cinema that no longer exists, who insist on sharing their fascinating story.