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
1-23 of 23
- A New York suburban couple's marriage goes dangerously awry when the wife indulges in an adulterous fling.
- A divorcee becomes entangled in a missing persons investigation that promises to send shockwaves throughout her life.
- A tale of nineteenth-century New York high society in which a young lawyer falls in love with a woman separated from her husband, while he is engaged to the woman's cousin.
- A devious sexpot steals her husband's drug money and hides out in a small town where she meets the perfect dupe for her next scheme.
- The music of The Beatles and the Vietnam War form the backdrop for the romance between an upper-class American girl and a poor Liverpudlian artist.
- A police officer uncovers the real identity of his house-guest, an I.R.A. terrorist in hiding.
- A writer suffering from agoraphobia rents an isolated house so she can concentrate on her writing. She doesn't know that the house is a former brothel, and is inhabited by the ghosts of dead prostitutes.
- A disillusioned housewife relies on her own ingenuity to survive when she and her son are kidnapped. This proof-of-concept for a feature marks director Jeremiah Kipp's first foray into thrillers after a long career in the horror genre.
- Jade and Lizzy are sisters and ever since their mom died a year ago they have worked as maids for the Lincoln family. Jade has the power to heal people but never uses it. Lizzy has no powers of her own but wishes Jade would embrace her power. When the Lincoln family's chronically ill child takes a turn for the worse, Jade and Lizzy face some tough decisions.
- A journey through the parent-child relationship with one simple question, "How Was Your Day?" Filmed once a month over a school year.
- When Lonnie lashes out at his wife Jennifer (the household breadwinner) one too many times, he is forced out onto the streets of New Jersey. Stripped of all cash and credit cards, he embarks on a journey that takes him from upscale suburban New Jersey to its dark underbelly and finally its pristine forests. With Lonnie beaten down and truly sorry, Jennifer finally allows him to return home -- but only after spending the night in the woods.
- Two brothers compete in a series of challenges to win their father's inheritance and continue his legacy.
- "In this picture is shown a group of ten of the most magnificent St. Bernard dogs in the world; all of them being many times prize winners. The dogs come across the lawn with their keeper, and stop in front of the camera, at which they look curiously."
- We unhesitatingly offer this as the greatest marine picture ever made. It was secured by special concessions, on September 6th, 1902, and shows the fastest steam yacht in the world, Charles R. Flint's "Arrow" making a world's record one-mile run on the Hudson River, near Irvington. The yacht was photographed during her entire run over the mile course. She first appears as a small speck on the horizon, but quickly grows to a full sized craft, plowing through the water at the rate of nearly a mile a minute.
- Nelson Holmes, a black man posing as a white man, had advanced from office boy to general manager. Nelson, hiding his true identity for obvious reasons, comes face to face with an old classmate during a job interview. Fearing that his old friend will expose his true color, he hires him to be his personal secretary. When one of Nelson's competitors tries to steal important contracts, his secretary rescues the contracts. Nelson is deeply affected by such loyalty.
- Alberto Simon is a frustrated restaurant Maitre'd. He wonders where he went wrong, and if he ever had a chance to live out his high school dream of taking his band to rock star status? In a daydream whirlwind, Alberto gets a small taste of life as a rock star, but will he ever have peace of mind?
- Danny Butler, recent Marine Corps veteran, finds out that transitioning back to civilian life in present day New York City comes with some good, some bad, and some hilarity.
- An old man who is lazy and miserable finally has a chance to get what he was dreaming of.
- In this narrated story of illustrated still images, Peter's parents take him to historic Chancemoor Castle, being the sort of parents who like educational vacations. The box office clerk looks convincingly like a gremlin. When Peter gets separated from his parents, the clerk finds him, reveals pointed ears she did not previously seem to have, and introduces herself as Shanakzoot, a hobbit (although she wears shoes) and apprentice to the Wizard Alyosious. Shanakzoot tells Peter that he is a special boy with a gift for magic, and if he can master a magical transformation, she will introduce him to Alyosious and the queen of the castle, Isadore. They exist in a parallel dimension that can be slipped into, topographically the same as the town but a heavily forested enchanted realm without all the contemporary houses and storms. Peter needs to learn more magic in order to retrieve the magic ring of Chancemoor from Zandor, the evil wizard of Stumbleswake Castle, who killed the king there, or Chancemoor Castle will crumble to dust in both dimensions. As Peter learns new magic, live-action sequences feature a Wizard who demonstrates how to do six simple sleight of hand tricks, two with standard card decks and four with other common household items such as paper, string, and drinking glasses..
- It's amazing what life is like without the burden of routine tasks. Introducing the Me Two Personal Assistant Clone, a remarkable product of cutting-edge engineering. Unfortunately, some unforeseen manufacturing errors have led to hostile takeovers of customer's lives.
- A bumbling, accident-prone everyman mysteriously attains the ability to edit his own life.
- America's Castles takes you to the Hudson Valley to explore three magnificent homes. We begin with Sunnyside, the home of beloved writer Washington Irving along the banks of the Hudson, where many of his most famous stories were written. Another leader in the arts, Frederic Edwin Church, a renowned landscape painter of the Hudson Valley school, built Olana a Persian inspired palace with commanding views of the Hudson Valley. Finally, a Beaux-Arts mansion built by architects McKim, Mead and White for financier and later, U.S. Secratary of the Treasury, Ogden Mills.