In 2024, GRAMMY®-winning, progressive music titans Dream Theater celebrated their 40th anniversary as a band, as well as the return of founding member Mike Portnoy, with a mammoth tour starting at London's legendary O2 Arena and continuing across the globe. 'Quarantième: Live à Paris' is a live presentation of that tour, filmed and recorded live in Paris in front of a huge audience at the Adidas Arena. Performing tracks from across the band's career, as well as material from their most recent acclaimed studio album, ‘Parasomnia’, this stunning audio/visual release documents a very special time in the band's history.
Peter Brixtofte was mayor of Farum and created a success that drew praise. But beneath the surface lurked an economic disaster that can still be felt in 2025.
Ruth Wilson is an elderly woman who spent the past forty years alone, crippled with regret. Motivated to end her loneliness, she chooses to make one more effort to reconcile with her estranged daughter, and find a companion to spend the rest of her life with.
Naarm drag artists JENS RADDA and IVA ROSEBUD are Neely O’Hara and Helen Lawson, in this lavish act of diva worship committed to Super 16mm film. Adapted from the camp classic 1967 film Valley of the Dolls, itself an adaptation of the Jacqueline Susann novel of the same name from 1966.
Every single day, dozens of tourists take their cameras to the poor Rio de Janeiro communities to shoot spectacularized internet videos. But this time, one will not only become the prey for the institutionalized horrors that be, but discover these horrors were brought from abroad just like him.
BR and Regelegorilla try out a 100% vegan fast-food spot and are surprised by how good the food is. Between bites, they dive into a spontaneous conversation about the acceptance of veganism—why it’s controversial, how mindsets can change, and what the experience teaches them. A short, fun, and thoughtful video.
In pursuit of enlightenment, a platinum selling record producer left his hedonistic life behind to live in a cave. Nine years later he continues to grapple with the question, what does it mean to be free?
At 2 A.M. on a quiet subway platform, an elderly woman waits alone after missing her train. Her solitude is interrupted when a lively young boy bounds up the stairs and spots a girl on the opposite platform. Without speaking, they start a playful game of rock-paper-scissors, their laughter filling the empty station. But as the girl’s train arrives, their connection is cut short. She waves from the window, and he waves back, smiling. The elderly woman, watching from afar, is reminded that even the briefest encounters can create lasting memories of joy and shared humanity.
A determined creative works through the expansion of his artistic practice. A young man seeks community in a life filled with laborious odd jobs. A young academic looks to embrace the change in her circumstances. Three New Yorkers in their mid-to-late twenties navigate personal, professional, and creative stagnation in the exploration of their purpose.
From words that intersect without ever really meeting, we see a soul that sees too much and another that understands too little, leaving a subtle trace of the emptiness of the human mind when it tries to be understood.
Struggling to provide for her young son, a resilient Indigenous mother finds unexpected solace in a charismatic street performer whose warmth conceals his own fragility. As their bond deepens, the pressures of poverty, prejudice, and personal sacrifice threaten to tear their fragile family apart.