Llewyn Davis é um cantor e compositor que sonha em viver da sua música. Com o violão nas costas, ele migra de um lugar para o outro na Nova York dos anos 60, sempre vivendo de favor na casa de amigos e outros artistas. Talentoso, mas sem se preocupar muito com o futuro, ele incomoda a amiga Jean Berkey, que vive uma relação com outro músico, Jim. Nem um pouco confiável, Davis se depara com a oportunidade de viajar na companhia de um consagrado e desagradável artista, Roland, mas nem tudo vai acabar bem nesta nova jornada.
Em uma escola secundária de Los Angeles, Zach Siler (Freddie Prinze Jr.) é o jovem mais popular. Ele namora Taylor Vaughan(Jodi Lyn O'Keefe), uma rica esnobe que é bastante badalada. Quando Taylor dispensa Zach para ficar com Brock Hudson (Matthew Lilard), um ator de televisão de terceira categoria, Zack aposta com um amigo que qualquer garota que ele namore se tornará a rainha do baile. A escolhida é Laney Boggs (Rachael Leigh Cook), que é estranha e inacessível, e Zack só tem seis semanas para conquistá-la e modificá-la. Esta tarefa se mostra bastante difícil mas gradativamente Zach se envolve com Laney, que agora se mostra muito mais bela.
A look at the world of webcam workers who find economic freedom, empowerment, intimacy and creative self expression from the comfort of their own homes.
A docu-drama portrait of the early-20th-century French author Marcel Proust, based on Alain de Botton's updated analysis of his work as a modern-day self-help guide. Ralph Fiennes plays Proust, with Phyllida Law and Donald Sinden as his contemporaries, while commentators including de Botton, Louis de Bernières and Doris Lessing explain their enthusiasm for his work.
This film explores freedom of speech in the United States of America
A story about the music in us.
An adaptation of the play "4.48 Psychosis" written by Sarah Kane. The movie consists of scenes that work as a fragmenteded voyage through the mind of a person on a deeply depressive state. Everything is shown in a raw and experimental manner to bring the feelings and emotions in the most pure form to screen.
Emilio, a six year old, feels deeply troubled by his parents' recent separation. Aware of his anguish, his grandmother decides to undertake a special mission to alleviate his emotions: to make him believe that he has the power to become invisible. Through this shared fantasy, they embark on an emotional journey where they learn to look beyond the superficial and recognize the true value of family bonds.
Three college students enter a mysterious building and encounter forces beyond their comprehension.
Bill Moyers and filmmaker David Grubin give viewers a rare glimpse into dancer/choreographer Bill T. Jones’s highly acclaimed dance Still/Here. At workshops around the country, people facing life-threatening illnesses are asked to remember the highs and lows of their lives, and even imagine their own deaths. They then transform their feelings into expressive movement, which Jones incorporates into the dance performed later in the program. For this documentary, Jones demonstrates the movements of his own life story: his first encounter with white people, confusion over his sexuality, his partner Arnie Zane’s untimely death from AIDS, and Jones’s own HIV-positive status.
A portrait of man dealing with himself on a rainy day. Part realistic, part expressionist.
This expressive and experimental short film by Iain Delavan features two distinct emotionally significant videos, broken up by an ethereal synthetic universe. Quoted by Delavan as "the best thing [they] have ever made", this film has many layers hidden underneath the seemingly simplistic surface.
A short film about identity and gender.
Bustoni, a performing arts worker who lives with his mother who are dying, has a question that distract his life. What will happen to a woman after death?