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1-18 of 18
- Red Earth imagines a world in the late Anthropocene, where large parts of Earth have become inhospitable to life. The story follows three generations of Martians, from the first colonists to the first expedition to return to an Earth decimated by interplanetary war.
- Renegade filmmaker Georg Koszulinski takes on Florida's history from a decidedly different point of view. Blending archival and original footage, he brings to life a cast of historical characters spanning over 12,000 years, from Florida's ancient Indians to the migrant farm workers of the 21st century. Meet Osceola and the Seminoles, who fought alongside escaped slaves in the most costly Indian War in American History. Unmask Florida's Ku Klux Klan and don't forget about Walt Disney and Henry Flagler - perhaps the two characters most responsible for the Florida we know today.
- In the year 2012, the 3rd great war comes to an end. The war claims no victors, but both sides succeed in executing their chemical warfare campaigns. The result is over 3 billion deaths. Over ninety-eight percent of the male survivors are rendered sterile. Human reproduction is realized by means of cloning. The first strand of clones are harvested in December of 2012 and received with overwhelming success. It was not until nineteen years later that the first problems arose.
- A man wakes up naked and alone in the middle of the vast Florida Everglades.
- Every season, tens of thousands of migrant farmworkers converge on small communities like Immokalee, Florida where they plant and harvest the food that Americans consume. A vast majority of these workers are undocumented, leaving them at the mercy of the large agribusinesses who hire them, the crew leaders who contract them and the landlords and businesses that profit from the seasonal arrival of migrant workers. Their "undocumented" legal status allows for a system of exploitation that leaves workers and their families to endure conditions and wages that rarely meet international human rights standards. Immokalee U.S.A. documents these daily experiences, leading the viewer to examine their own role in the issues migrant workers face in the U.S.A.
- A documentary about the world's most published and controversial comic artist: Jack T. Chick. His cartoons, conspiracies, and controversies are revealed for the first time on screen. Both critics and supporters give a complete view of this mysterious recluse, the invisible mastermind behind the Chick comic book Empire.
- Part:1 In 1966, Saul Lennewitz received a radio transmission unlike anything ever heard before. He recorded his observations on audio reels containing over 140 hours of documentation. The United States Government has withheld these recordings from the pubic domain for over 30 years. Due to the Freedom of Information Act, these recordings were released in 1999. The U.S. Government denies their disinformation campaign targeted at Dr. Lennewitz and refuses to comment on the validity of the tapes. Part:2 1966 - end. Found footage from the past twenty five years exposits the paranoiac fears inherent in all humans. Themes of race, religion, warfare, technology and conspiracy are explored.
- Multiple time zones converge in the deserts of New Mexico--Pre-Columbian petroglyphs and Indigenous cave dwellings, post-war highways, Spanish colonial remnants, and the deserts of ancient past and post-apocalyptic future coalesce into single image stream. Inspired in part by J.G Ballard's 1962 science-fiction novel, The Drowned World.
- A fictional account of David Koresh's last words, a cursory analysis of the pantheon of Icelandic sagas, a home movie taking into account 20 years of filming on an old Bolex 16mm camera, a series of reflections on the destructive nature of industrialized societies, a collaged metaphysical travelogue film, a love letter.
- Juskatla weaves together perspectives of the people who live on the islands of Haida Gwaii-an archipelago on Canada's Northwest coast, and the ancestral territories of the Haida Nation. From industrial loggers who clearcut trees from ancient forests, to Sphenia Jones, a Haida woman who bears an intimate knowledge of her ancestral territories, Juskatla meditates on the divergent ways of being that shape the islands and its people.
- A documentary portrait of Scott Camil, peace activist, educator, Winter Soldier, and Vietnam War Veteran.
- Video glitch as formal means of erasing glacier from mountain, projecting image of impending future. I filmed this footage on a small island off the coast of Iceland where the volcano cone, Eldfell erupted in 1973. The glacier, Svínafellsjökull, was filmed in Iceland. Video footage was processed through a variety of digital and analog means.
- In 1587, 115 English colonists led by John White arrive on Roanoke Island. The colonists send White back to England for supplies but he isn't able to return until three years later. When White arrives on Roanoke in 1590, he finds the colony abandoned, and the word 'CROATOAN' carved on the fort's palisade.
- Charlie Johnson is terminally ill. Though estranged from his family, he maintains contact with his two sons, Dustin and Dennis. His sons have taken divergent paths: Dennis volunteers his time to curate the weekly poetry readings in his hometown and remains unemployed. Dustin works as a program analyst at a large firm, where he earns a respectable income. After Dennis sends his father a paperback copy of Black Elk Speaks, a book that chronicles the destruction of Lakota Sioux/Plains culture at the end of the 19th century, Charlie reads the book and has a vision. The vision tells him that he must travel to America's Great Plains, where he will find the last remaining buffalo and restore the "sacred hoop." Reluctantly, and with concerns that his father is suffering from the ill-effects of his medication, Dustin agrees to join his father. The narrative chronicles their journey to the Great Plains during the final days of Charlie Johnson's life.
- Filmed in remote regions of Iceland's countryside, the 3rd film in Koszulinski's Anthropocene cycle folds Norse mythology with the 6th mass extinction event currently underway. Deep time, historical time, and mythological time converge and poetry becomes the means through which the film weaves together these disparate time scales. A lifetime, geologic time, the arc of human history, Earth years, mythological time, and time as one experiences it at the movies all merge into a single audio-visual thread.
- On January 20, 2017, protestors took to the streets of Washington D.C. to disrupt the inauguration of President Donald J. Trump. Inauguration Day presents fragments of the day's events, employing affective approaches to observational documentary coupled with on-the-street interviews with anti-Trump protestors.