Explore the history behind Jimi Hendrix’s legendary recording studio, used by AC/DC, David Bowie, Taylor Swift, Lady Gaga, in the documentary Electric Lady Studios: A Jimi Hendrix Vision.
Trailers
News (Blog) and more for lovers of indie films, documentary and film festivals
Trailers
Explore the history behind Jimi Hendrix’s legendary recording studio, used by AC/DC, David Bowie, Taylor Swift, Lady Gaga, in the documentary Electric Lady Studios: A Jimi Hendrix Vision.
Documentary Made In England: The Films of Powell & Pressburger, looks at the art of the British filmmakers Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger through the eyes of Martin Scorsese.
Titled after Samuel Beckett’s famous ethos “Dance first, think later,” Dance First starring Gabriel Byrne is a sweeping account of the life of the Irish playwright.
Directed by Simon Verhoeven, the biopic film Girl You Know it’s True re-tells the story of the iconic and controversial pop duo Milli Vanilli.
‘Ol Dirty Bastard: A Tale of Two Dirtys’ explores how Russell Tyrone Jones created Ol’ Dirty Bastard, a Hip Hop alter ego superhero that would ultimately consume him.
Tiger King director Eric Goode returns to explore the crazy world of exotic animal lovers with ‘Chimp Crazy’, HBO documentary series on ‘chimp moms’.
A pastor takes a young gay teen to a cabin to perform conversion therapy in The Exorcism of Saint Patrick.
Terrence Howard and Alec Baldwin star in Crescent City, a crime thriller film that follows the search for a serial killer in a southern American town.
A sex worker from Brooklyn finds herself caught in a battle to protect her fairytale love story in ‘Anora’ by Sean Baker.
Kate Winslet stars in the bio-drama film ‘Lee’ as Lee Miller, a renowned American photojournalist who was a war correspondent for Vogue during World War II.
Sebastian Stan stars in the dark comedy film A Different Man Z as a man with a craniofacial condition who undergoes surgery for a fresh start.
Inspired by the book from historian Donald Bogle, Hollywood Black, directed by Justin Simien, chronicles the history of cinema, but from a radically Black perspective.